,^ -CTi S^^CNI ^ — . O -o 5 CD C^ cr> ^.'ia^zt:::^>~fir>yi^\ Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2008 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/ethnographycasteOObainuoft l^ko ^^j^jgp^ Encyclopedia of Indo-Aryan Research FOUNDED BY (;. BUllLER, CONTINUED BY F. KIEI.HORN, EDITED BY H. LUDERS AND J. VVACKERNAGEL. VOL. II, PART 5. ETHNOGRAPHY (CASTES AND TRIBES) SIR ATHELSTANE BAINES WITH A LIST OF THE MORE IMPORTANT WORKS ON INDIAN ETHNOGRAPHY BY W. SIEGLING. ^lubcr tl]C |Jntronagc nf Jijis Majesty's |Irt:trifial ^ccrctarg of ^iate for ^nlita. STRASSBURG KARL J. TRUBNER 1912. PS M. DiiMoiit Schmiberg, StraClmrg. Encyclopedia of Indo-Aryan Research FOUNDED BY U. BUHLER, CONTINUED BY F. KIELHORN, EDITED BY H. LUDERS AND J. WACKERNAGEL. VOL. II, PART 5. ETHNOGRAPHY (CASTES AND TRIBES) BY SIR ATHELSTANE BAINES. INTRODUCTION. § I. The subject with which it is proposed to deal in the present work is that branch of Indian ethnography which is concerned with the social organisation of the population, or the dispersal of the latter into definite groups based upon considerations of race, tribe, blood or oc- cupation. In the main, it takes the form of a descriptive survey of the return of castes and tribes obtained through the Census of 1901. The scope of the review, however, is limited to the population of India properly so called, and does not, therefore, include Burma or the outlying tracts of Baluchistan, Aden and the Andamans, by the omission of which the population dealt with is reduced from 294 to 283 millions. § 2. It should be borne in mind from the outset, that but for the fact that this vast aggregate is spread over a continuous area between Cape Comorin and the Himalaya, and is politically under one rule, the population does not contain, as a whole, any of the essential elements of Nationality. Irrespective of racial differences, which, for reasons which will appear below, are to a great extent outside the Census inquiry, the Language, falling under no less than 147 heads, varies from Province to Province, each of the principal tongues having its dialects whose Shibboleth infallibly denotes the stranger a hundred miles or so from his native village. Society, again, is split up into almost innumerable self-contained divisions, under sacerdotal prohibition from intermarriage and domestic intercourse with each other. Religion, moreover, constitutes a well-defined distinction only in the case of creeds introduced from abroad, and the Faith returned under a single title, itself of foreign origin, by nearly three fourths of the population covers a vast and incoherent collection of beliefs and forms of worship, from the tribal animism of the primitive denizens of the forest to those involving the most refined metaphysical conceptions. Neither religion nor language, then will be here discussed more than cursorily, and solely in their bearings upon the ethnography of the country. Full information upon the philology and the main currents of religious belief of India will be found in special treatises upon those subjects in other volumes of this Encyclopaedia. Moreover, neither creed nor mother-tongue affords an adequate, or even an approximate indication of the great fundamental variety of race, a subject which also escapes the Census inquiry since Indo-Aryan Research. II. 5. 1 5. Ethnography. the latter takes cognisance, perforce, of existing facts only, whilst race has been for centuries obscured by the operation of the two most pre- valent forms of religious profession. The plastic and assimilative nature of Brahmanism absorbs, whilst the uncompromising tendencies of Islam obliterate, distinctions of race equally with those of doctrine and cere- monial, and both have their effect in diminishing the popularity of the more restricted vernaculars. The veil of superficial uniformity which has thus been drawn over the actual elements from which Indian society has been formed can only be removed, and then but iwrtially and on con- jecture perhajis, by recourse to such ethnological evidence as may be gleaned from tradition and literature, with the aid, in certain directions, of anthropometrical investigation, so far as it has yet been carried. Purity of descent is no more a general characteristic of the population of India than it is of any other old civilisation in the Eastern Hemisphere in which geographical conformation admits of access from the North. In the Upper, or Continental, portion of India that purity is probably found in the upper classes of the Panjab and Rajputana. It exists, too, at the ojiposite end of the social ladder, amongst the Hill tribes of the Belt dividing the above portion of India from the Peninsula. South of that barrier, again, the population, except along parts of the West Coast, is comparatively homo- geneous, and the main variations noticeable in it are not more marked than those which may reasonably be attributed to secular differences in habits and pursuits. The principal physical features of the country have to be taken into account in connection with its ethnography, as they have played a highly important part in determining the racial distribution of the population. To put it briefly, India can only be entered from the north by any considerable body of men by passes through the outlying ranges running southwards from the Himalaya in the western extension of that great system. In early times, no doubt, access was comparatively easy by routes debouching on the middle and lower Indus, over country which is now sandy desert, but which was once the abode of a consi- derable population. Similarly, on the eastern flank of the Himalaya, the trend of the lower ranges renders it possible for those accustomed to forest and mountain life to enter, though not in large bodies, the valley of the Brahmaputra or the eastern Gangetic Delta. Between the mountains and the next obstacle, the ranges of Central India, lie the vast alluvial plain of the Ganges and its tributaries and the open plains of the Five Rivers. The Central Belt, of considerable width in both hill and forest, though of insignificant height in comparison with the Himalaya, is yet sufficiently difficult to have proved an effective obstacle in the infancy of means of communication and of protective government. It also affords shelter to a considerable population of the wilder tribes, of old the guardians of the routes through their territory. As in the case of the Himalaya, however, the flank can be turned on both east and west, as the hills do not reach either coast, and the narrow strips intervening between the ranges and the sea consist of fertile and low-lying country-, presenting little or no difficulty of passage on the East, at all events, to the great southern plains and the Dekkan plateau. These prominent na- tural features have now to be coordinated with the ethnology of India, so far as our knowledge of the latter extends. § 3. The basic population of practically the whole country- consists of a dark, short and broad-nosed race, with wavy, but not woolly, hair. Introduction. 3 In the present day it is represented by the wild tribes of the Central Belt, and in a higher state of culture by the population of the southern portions of the Peninsula. On philological grounds, the people south of the Belt are distinguished from those further north. The former, known as Dravidian, seem always to have kept to their present localities, except in a few cases where tribes have migrated into the Belt within historic times. The other race, to which the title of Kol or Munda, is generally attached, is not known south of the forest Belt, in which it is at the present time concentrated under its distinctive tribal appellations. Formerly, however, it was spread over the whole of the great plains of Upper India, and, according to recent philological discoveries, it is akin, at least in language, to communities now settled on the borders of Assam, and far to the east of the Bay of Bengal. Some investigators, indeed, spread its former habitat over a still wider area. In the east and north-east of India, however, its identity has been obscured, if not obliterated, by the successive immigra- tions of people of IMongoloidic race from eastern Tibet and the head waters of the great Chinese rivers, whose main streams of migration have sought the sea by the valleys of the Irawadi, Salwin and Mekhong. In the Gangetic plain the type is traceable throughout the population, slightly, indeed, along the Jamna, but more distinctly as the east is approached, and almost everywhere more prevalent as the social position is lower. This graduation is due to miscegenation between the Kol, who, as far as ethnography is concerned, may be considered the autochthonous inhabitant of these tracts, and a taller and fairer race, which entered India by the passes of the North-west or the plains of Balijchistan. More than one such race are known to history, but in most cases their impact upon India was sharp but short; not, at any rate, of a character to leave a permanent impression upon the population. Such, for instance, was the connection of the iMacedonians with the Panjab. More durable though still in few cases amounting to settlement or colonisation, were the principalities set up from time to time in the North-west by scions of the race or races termed Scythian, of whom more will be said below. The only immigrating race of practical importance in connection with the present subject, is that of the Aryas, whose advent and progress are indirectly, and to a great extent conjecturally, revealed in the collection of their invocations handed down from perhaps as early as 3000 B C, in the Rgveda and the sacerdotal literature appended to it at later dates. § 4. From these sources it appears that a number of cognate tribes of northern race and pastoral habits advanced across and along the Indus into the Panjab, where they settled after dispossessing the dark tribes in occupation, relegating them to the position of helots in the service of the new communities. The Vedic Aryas seem to have lost touch in time with their original country across the snows, and to have developed their civilisation on lines peculiarly their own. Their progress eastwards from the Indus was that of expansion rather than of conquest, as the Kol tribes seem after a time to have offered no serious resistance. The comparatively easy conditions of life in sub-tropical circumstances, and the immunity from attack in force from the west, which was secured by their mountain rampart, combined to soften the northern fibre of the race, and, in course of time, the supreme influence over the community was transferred from the chieftain to the priests, under whose auspices society was organised in a way that secured the absolute supremacy of their own order. The 5. Ethnography. system thus established was so elastic in the matter of doctrine and worship, so simple in its demands upon traditional rites and customs, that without |)ropaganda or formal conversion, it absorbed and continues to absorb into the pale of orthodoxy the religious and domestic observances of all the non-Aryan tribes with which it came into contact. As a neces- sary result, ethnical distinctions are thus obliterated by religious termino- logy, and, along with the tribal nomenclature, tribal languages have long tended to disappear from usage. This has been the case throughout the Gangetic valley, in Central India, and along the northern districts of the Western coast, in none of which tracts is creed or language an indication of racial origin. In the first named region, too, the physical characteristics of the masses denote clearly the admixture of Kol with Aryan blood, a blend which, as above stated, grows more perceptible as the distance from the centres of Aryan settlement increases. The striking differences in this respect between the population of the Panjab and northern Raj- putana and that east of the Jamna appears to be due both to the stricter maintenance of the purity of the original northern stock, and also to the recruitment of that stock through the subsequent occupation of the first- mentioned tracts by communities from beyond the Himalaya. The most important of the latter are the various tribes known in ancient Indian literature by the probably generic title of S'aka, or Scythians, the greater portion of whom made their way south by way of Bactria. In mure than one instance the dynasty establishing itself in India lasted so long and penetrated so far into the interior, that it is almost certain to have left a physical, as well as a political, impress upon the population. The case of the Yetha Hunas, or White Huns, is c)ne in point. After the usual vicissitudes north of the great ranges, they ruled in Central India for a considerable period, and, long before their overthrow, they seem to have been absorbed into the local chieftainry of Rajputana and Malva. For several generations, too, a Pahlava, or Parthian, dynasty held sway on the lower Indus. The origin of most of these peoples was probably in the ^longoloid regions of north-east Asia, but recent investigators appear to consider that it is not improbable that at least one, and that an important dynasty in Northern India, was of .-Vryan race, driven southwards by the pressure on west-central Asia from the north-east. Whatever the actual race, the point relevant to the present iiuestion is that they were all northerners, and thus alien in blood and physique to the prc-.\ryan in- habitants of India. § 5. The Connection of the Aryas with Dravidian India seems to have been of a different character from that established in the Gangetic region and the Panjab. There does not appear to have been any coloni- sation, and little, if any, cross-breeding. It may be fairly conjectured that the open and fertile plains of the south-east afforded opportunities for civilisation upon local lines to an extent which, by the time the .\ryas had spread to the means of access from the north, had placed the Dravidian communities in a much stronger position than the Kol tribes of the Continental plains. From the Aryan additions to the vocabulary of the vernacular tongues and the s])ecial features of the Brahmanism and the social system of the South it may be inferred that the influence of .\ryan civilisation was there of a missionary, not political or military, character. The cloak of Brahmanic orthodoxy was thrown over the local deities and ceremonial, and social divisions adopted the Brahmanic organisation : but, Introduction. beyond the introduction of a certain contingent of Brahmans as teachers and advisers, no Aryan blood was infused into the population. Along the western coast, however, which is cut off from the Tamil country and the Dekkan by the Sahyadri range, tradition assigns a northern origin to several of the more important communities, and is confirmed by physical appearance and certain sjiccial customs. !; 6. It remains to mention the more modern accretions to the peoples of India received from foreign countries, but now permanently established in the land of their adoption. Of movements of this description which have had a racial signi- ficance, that which took place under the auspices of the followers of Muhammad first claims attention. It must be noted, however, that, on the whole, the extent to which it introduced fresh blood into the country is of far less importance than its religious and political influence. India con- tains, it is true, more Muslim than any other country in the world, and votaries of their faith are found in every part of it; but, except in the territories bordering upon the exclusively Muslim States of Afghanistan and Balijchistan, the community consists almost entirely of local converts from Rrahmanism, without any admixture of foreign blood. In Upper India, colonies of considerable importance were left by successive waves of invasion, especially in and round the cities founded or occupied by the conquering races. In the case of the Moghal dynasties, military and ad- ministrative centres were established far down the Ganges and on the western coast. The Arabs, too, have been in commercial intercourse with that coast from time immemorial, and have planted permanent settlements as far south as Malabar. The largest aggregates, however, of foreign Muslim are those recruited from the Indus frontier, and settled not far from that river. The conversion of Sindh and Kashmir has long been almost complete, and that of the eastern tracts of the great Delta of the Ganges and Brahmaputra is in active progress, and already extends to more than half the population. With this exception, the proportion of Muslim diminishes, like that of the Aryan stock, southwards and eastwards from the Panjab, and is very small amongst the Dravidians, and scarcely existent in the Central Belt of hills and forests. From the standpoint of ethnography it is not to be assumed that the results of conversion to Islam extend no further than the substitution of one dogma or ritual for another, as is the case, to a great extent, when a lower race is absorbed into Brahmanism. The acceptance of the monotheistic creed entails, as a rule, material expansion of the matrimonial field and of the social horizon generally, with a wider range of diet also, all of which tend to differentiate, after a generation or two, the converted community from that to which it originally belonged, the modification extending to physical as well as to other attributes. § 7. Another community which, as regards the majority of its members, is the result of apostolic zeal rather than of immigration, is that of the Christians in India, of whom more than 91 per cent are native to the country and another 3 per cent of mixed European and native origin. The remainder are practically sojourners only, and comprise the European military and civil establishments, the mercantile communities of the larger cities, and the considerable staff of the railway systems. The conversion of certain localities, chiefly on the Malabar coast, is alleged to date from the first century of the Christian era; but until the arrival of the Portu- 6 5- Ethnography. guesc, the propaganda was not extended far beyond the original settle- ments of the Nestorian Church. The Roman Catholic missionaries, under the political aegis of Goa, ranged over a large portion of Southern India, and, to this day, three fourths of the Christian population of India belongs to the Dravidian tracts, and more than half to the Church of Rome. The differentiation of the convert to this religion from his Brahmanic fellows varies, usually according to the numbers and homogeneity of the local congregation. The breach with old custom is more marked where con- version is comparatively sporadic, and slighter in the case where Christianity has been hereditary for generations, or, if of comparatively recent accep- tance, has been embraced by considerable numbers of more or less the same social position. This position, owing mainly to the restrictions of the caste system, is generally low, as the change is there not only less of a sacrifice to people who have no hope of rising, but may even bring with it some chances of ameliorating their lot. § 8. At the very opposite pole to the Muslim and Christians in regard to recruitment by propaganda of their religion, stand the small but well defined body of Parsis. The original settlers of this race were driven out of Iran by the Muslim in the 7th century, and the bulk of their descendants are still to be found in and round the tract upon which they first landed, on the coast north of Bombay. The opening of the latter by the British as the commercial emporium of western India, induced many families of Parsis to migrate thither, and from this centre they have spread all over the country to such an extent that, though their aggregate nimibers is only just over 93000, there is scarcely a large town in India in which a few families of Parsi traders are not resident. From their arrival in the country the Parsis made a point of keeping their race and ritual unsullied by intercourse with their neighbours, and to this particularism is due to some extent, their very slow rate of increase. It is remarkable, however, that with this strict maintenance of their customs and ritual, and their abstinence from intermarriage with Indians, the Parsis have long lost all hold of their original language, Pahlavi, except in their liturgy, and uni- versally make use of Gujarati as their mother-tongue. § 9. In addition to the Christians, Parsis and Arabs, the west coast of India has also afforded refuge to successive small bodies of Israelites, of which the more ancient, at all events, hold the tradition that like the Parsis, they were driven by persecution from their fatherland. Like the sons of Iran, again, they have kept up their religion and customs and lost their mother-tongue. The earliest colony is that of Cochin, on the Malabar coast, which dates from the Christian era, if not from an earlier period. It consists of two sections, the White, which has kept its breed pure, and gets its brides occasionally from Syria and Baghdad, and the Black, which is suspected of intermarriage with Indians or of the incor- poration of local converts in days of yore, and is therefore socially avoided by the others. The total number of both communities does not exceed 1300, and is not increasing. Another Jewish settlement of apparently distinct origin from those further south, is that of the Beni-Israel, on the mainland near Bombay. The members thereof possess the i^hysical charac- teristics of their race, and keep up their religious observances, though they have adopted the dress and language of their Maratha neighbours. Unlike their compatriots in general, they are engaged chiefly in cultivation, and have taken to a considerable extent also to military service in the Introduction. British Indian army. They have the same tradition as those of Cochin as to their exile from their country under persecution, but seem to have a iaxer grip of their past than the latter, and no inclination for alliances with those of their race beyond the seas. In numbers they greatly surpass their fellow exiles. The largest community of Jews in India is the com- paratively recent commercial settlement in Bombay and to a less extent in Calcutta, of traders from Baghdad, who, whilst permanently settled in their place of business, keep in close touch with their old home. § 10. The above sketch of the ethnological aspect of the subject will serve to indicate this fact of primary relevance, that, north of the Dravidian country, the demarcation of race is only ascertainable in the case of the communities under tribal constitution, such as the Kol of the Central Belt, the jMongoloid tribes of the North-cast, and the Muslim immigrants of the North-west. The undoubted racial difference between the fair people of Rajputana and the Panjab and the masses further east is obscured, for the purposes of ethnography, by the superstructure of Brahmanism under which it now lies buried. This survey would be in- complete, however, without some exposition of the distribution of creed and language, even though it be restricted to mere numbers. First, then, in regard to !Mothertongue, it will be seen from Table I given cm the ne.xt page, that no more than about one person in a thousand returns any language not peculiar to India or its immediate vicinity, and that one, is probably a European sojourner. Nine in a thousand speak a frontier dialect, mainly PashtU, Baluchi, Tibetan or one of the almost innumerable languages of the hill-tracts between India and Burma. The languages distinguishable as restricted respectively to special tribes are returned by some 6' \ millions ; and, on the whole, 96 per cent speak Indo-Aryan languages or Dravidian, other than those of the hill-tribes. Appended to this volume is a Table showing the territorial distribution of each of the principal tongues, from which a conception may be formed of the great linguistic diversity of the country. § II. It will be inferred from what has been stated above, that the diversity of religion is by no means equal to that of language, so far as nomenclature is in question. In Table II on the next page, the numbers of those professing the main forms of belief are given, along with their relative proportion to the total population. It must be understood that the term „Tribal Animism" refers to the religion returned under the tribal name by those who adhere to none of the wider creeds. Again, the title „Hinduism" is only recognised by the community to whom it is applied as denoting a distinction between them and the foreigner. The word was first used by the ?iluslim invaders for all Indian creeds in which the uncompromising Unitarianism of the follower of the Prophet detected signs of the worship of idols. It is here taken in its conventional sense of „the collection of rites, worships, beliefs, traditions and mythologies that are sanctioned by the sacred books and ordinances of the Brahmans, and are propagated by Brahmanic teaching" (Lyall). In practice, this amounts to the application of the title to any Brahmanic community that has not returned t)ne of the more specific denominations which can legitimately be included under the general name. Consequently, the great mass of the people come under it. The prevalence of the different professions of faith in the principal territorial divisions of India is shown in a Table appended to this volume. 5- Ethnography. J Population Population returniny Linguistic Class !-5i Languages native to Total Per 100,000 Indian Frontiers India Foreign Counviet I. Kol-Khervari lO 3,179,273 1,124 — 3,179,273 II. Dravidian. . 14 56,315,740 19,911 47,943 56,267,797 — m. Arj-o-Dravidian * 344,143 122 344,143 — IV. Indo-Aryan . 20 219,352,079 77,556 54,425 219,297,654 — V. Iranian. . . 6 1,388,223 491 1,369,133 — 19,090 VI. Tibeto-Burman 62 1,804,776 638 960,585 844,191 — VII. M6n . . . 2 177,854 63 27 177,827 — VIII. Tai . . . . 6 3,366 I 3,366 — IX. Mongolian 4 3,566 I — _ 3,566 X. Malay . . . I 26 — — — 26 XI. Semitic 3 19,726 7 — — 19,726 XII. Hamitic t 185 — — — 185 XIII. European. . 23 151 243,109 86 — — 243,109 Total returned 282,832,066 100,000 2,435,479 280,110,885 285,702 Not returned . . 158,997 — — Population . . — 282,991,063 — — — — * Gipsy dialects, undistinguishable. t Returned in generic terms, as Abyssinian, Negro etc. II. Religion Population Proportion to 100,000 I. Religions native to India . . . A. Tribal Animism B. Offshoots of Brahmanism. (i) Hinduism (2) Brahma and Arya Samaj . . (3) Sikhism (4) Jainism (5) Buddhism II. Religions of Foreign Origin . . C. Mazdaism 218,797,808 8,176,560 206,715,341 96,054 2,185,330 1,333,820 290,703 64,193.255 93.449 14,436 61,315,475 2,767,235 2,660 77,316 2,890 73,046 34 772 471 103 22,684 33 D. Judaism 5 21 667 E. Islam F. Christianity G. Others 97S I Total . . 282,991,063 100,000 § 12. One of the most interesting ethnographical questions entering into the Census inquirj' is that of the rate at which Brahmanism is in name, at least, absorbing the Animistic tribal population. Unfortunately, this cannot be fully solved from the returns, owing to the different inter- Social Organisation. A. Historical. pretations given to the instructions for recording tribal creeds and languages. The enumerators, or those who instructed them, adopted somewhat ar- bitrary standards of orthodoxy and philology, and what was set down as tribal in one tract appeared under the more general title in another, just across a political frontier. Speaking generally, the tendency seems to have been to return the tribal terms wherever the community in question is in predominant occupation of a cuntinuous and well-defined region, and is thus in comparative isolation from the civilisation of the plains. Where, on the other hand, the tribe is interlaced with the Brahmanical peasantry, the distinction was less noticed, and probably the line is in reality less discernible. It may be interesting, in spite of the above drawbacks, to learn what the conditions are as set forth at the Census, so a further Table, in which the proportion in which each tribe returned the tribal religion and language is given in the Appendix. SOCIAL ORGANISATION. A. Historical. § 13. Tribe. — In the outline given in the Introduction it was shown that throughout the greater part of continental India, the region most in- fluenced by foreign blood, distinctions of race have been practically effaced by centuries of cross-breeding. It is to be noted, however, that wherever a race can still be geographically demarcated from its hybrid neighbours the ethnic constitution tends to be tribal, consisting, that is, of groups with a common name, the tradition of kinship or descent from a common ancestor, human, demi-god or wild animal, as the case may be, and claiming or occupying a definite territory. The system on which the tribe is organised varies considerably according to the race and the conditions under which it lives. That most intimately connected with India proper is found amongst the Kol-Dravidians of the Central Belt. Here, the tribe is subdivided into numerous exogamous sections, each bearing the name of a plant or animal of the locality, and marrying almost invariably within the tribe itself, or, at most, not beyond an adjacent and probably kindred community of similar organisation and form of religious and domestic ce- remonial. The Mongoloid tribes of Assam and the eastern frontier are also divided into sections professing blood -relationship, and therefore not marrying within the section, but trusting to their fellow-tribesmen of other divisions to provide them with brides, either by arrangement or capture. On the opposite frontier, the tribal constitution of the Pathan and BalOch races is of a markedly different type. The Baluch tribe is bound together by political rather than ethnic ties, owning allegiance, that is, to a common Chieftain ; but amongst the clans which go to form this unit, there is found very often, if not usually, the tradition of blood-kinship, surrounded by a fringe of strangers who have affiliated themselves to the community for the purpose of mutual defence, and who, after a term of probation, are admitted to full tribesmanship. The subdivisions of these clans are exogamous, and there is a tendency, but nothing stronger, towards endogamy within the tribe. Amongst the Pathans the tribe is more closely knit, and the bond is kinship in the male line. As amongst the Baliich, however, strangers are admitted to qualified membership, tending, in time, to be treated, by fiction, as kinship. There is not the element of allegiance to a common Chief, 10 5- Ethnography. though in many cases such dignitaries do exist and are regarded as war- lords and representatives of the tribe in dealing with the outer world. But the internal management uf tribal affairs is vested in a tribal Council, composed of the Heads of clans or other subdivisions of the main body. Marriage takes place, as a rule, within the race, and in practice is re- gulated by Muslim, not tribal, prescriptions regarding affinity. The in- fluence of these races, especially of the Pathan, upon the whole population of the western Panjab, has had the result of substantially modifying the social structure, elevating the tribal, or blood connection, enlarging the marriage field, and generally promoting the adoption of the freer life of the Highlands in preference to the stricter and more elaborate system which prevails throughout Brahmanic India. § 14. Caste. It is with the latter, however, that this review is mainly concerned, and the only object of the above remarks is to differentiate the organisation of, so to speak, the pure races of India from that of the great mass of the population. Amid the bewildering variety of the com- plicated civilisation of this last the one and only characteristic which can be said to be universal is the sentiment which underlies the scheme of life upon which the whole of the social edifice is based and its component parts are respectively distinguished and coordinated. This sentiment, moreover, may be said to be the very spinal cord of the main religion of the country, supplying the vitality and support which neither doctrine nor ritual are sufficiently coherent to provide. By its means, Brahmanism has become, as has been said by a competent observer, "a way of life, "interwoven into the whole of existence and society; placing every na- "tural habit and duty upon a religious basis so entirely that it is impossible "for a Brahmanist to draw a distinction between sacred and profane. A "man's religion means his customary rule of every-day life. His whole "social identity belongs to his religion". (Lyall. Asiatic Studies.) This omnipresence of the religious sanction and the rigidity which it imparts to diversity elsewhere susceptible of diminution or effacement is not only the most prominent feature of the social organisation of India, but is also peculiar to the latter, marking it out as distinct from any other civilisation in the world. In other respects, there is little in the system which is not to be found, or which has not at some time or other existed, in other countries, even of the West, though it has there been long ago worn away by other influences. The crystallisation of certain bodies into definite orders or classes, for instance, is a common, almost a universal, trait, and amongst them the tendency to become hereditary and as exclusive or aspiring as circumstances allow may almost be called natural. A superior and conquering race, again, has been known elsewhere to settle for generations alongside of a population in every way inferior to it, compelling the latter into servile conditions and drawing upon it for wives and concubines without making any return in kind. Sacerdotalism, too, has had its day of supremacy elsewhere than in India. Restrictions in regard to the choice of a wife and upon participation in meals of a commemorative or other ritualistic significance, are, of course, common property. But in no other case has the position of a sacerdotal class been so firmly established nor has its influence so deeply permeated the whole of a vast community, as to enable it to prescribe, under the sanction of religion, a code of elaborate prescriptions on domestic and personal conduct which is accepted by all as the ideal, according to the relative conformity with Social Organisation. A. Historical. which the rank of every group of the society, from top to bottom, is unalterably settled. A system of this description, which, practically un- changed in its main principles, has for many centuries regulated the lives of millions; which is absorbing every generation more and more of the tribal population of a lower type brought into contact with it, and which has not only successfully resisted, but has even been to a great extent assimilated by so dogmatic and uncompromising a rival as Islam, must obviously have its roots very deep indeed in the proclivities and traditions of the multitudes living under it. Whether it be indigenous to India, or whether it existed in an em- bryonic form amongst the Aryas before their great dispersal, is a question which has been the subject of wide and erudite discussion. Probably it is insoluble, most theories of primitive society being apt, according to Sir Henry IMaine, to land the adventurer in a region of mud-banks and fog. This, remarks the author of the last Census report (1901, p. 546), "is more especially the case in India, where the palaeological data available "in Europe hardly exist at all, while the historical value of the literary "evidence is impaired by the uncertainty of its dates, by the sacerdotal "predilections of its authors, by their passion for wire-drawn distinctions "and symmetrical classifications, and by their manifest inability to draw "any clear line between fact and fancy, between things as they are and "things as they might be, or as a Brahman would desire them to be". § 15. The social divisions which form the units of the system in question are known in the West by the name of Castes, which was given them by the early Portuguese travellers. It is said to be derived from the Latin word casta^ pure or unmixed, in itself connoting segregation, and was applied by Camoens, for instance, in the sense of tribe or even race, to the Pulayan or helots, in contradistinction to the Nayar, their conquerors. It needs but a very short time in the country to bring home to the most casual observer the ubiquity of the institution, and to make him acquainted with some of its principal exoteric features. He might possibly feel himself in a position to define it, an enterprise from which after longer experience he would shrink, as the more caste is studied, the more numerous are the qualifications found to be advisable in describing it. It is necessary, however, for the purposes of this review, to set forth in terms as definite as the case allows the leading features of the com- munity which forms the main subject of this work. Of the many definitions which have been given by various authors, the most satisfactory, on the whole, is that adopted by Mr Gait, the joint author of the last (1901) Census Report, in dealing with the castes of the Province of Bengal, "A caste", he says (p. 354), "is an endogamous group or a collection of "endogamous groups, bearing a common name, the members of which "by reason of similarity of traditional occupation and reputed origin are "generally regarded as forming a single homogeneous community, "the constituent parts of which are more nearly related to each other "than they are to any other section of the society". From this it appears, then, that the members of a caste may only marry within its limits; but nearly every caste is made up of sections upon whom the same restriction is imposed with reference to their limits, the title of the subdivision being added to that of the main aggregate. The occupation, again, which is common to the latter, is a traditional one, and is not by any means neces- sarily that by which all, or even most, of the group make their living 12 5. Ethnography. in the present day. On the other hand, the common origin, which is now claimed by most, is largely a matter of fiction, accepted, however, without cavil. The factor of public opinion, too, is of some importance in the definition, since the view taken by an aspiring section of a caste of its relationship to the main body is apt to differ from that accorded to it by the other castes amongst whom its lot is thrown, whilst the acquaintance of the upper classes with the organisation of those below them, and their interest in it are of the slightest, until perhaps an encroachment comes within measurable reach of their own position. It sometimes happens, therefore, that a subdivision by retaining its own title but substituting a fresh one for that of its main caste, obtains a jumping-ground for a new start in society, which may impose upon the outer world but not upon the imme- diate surroundings. Reverting, for a moment to the definition, it may be noted that while endogamy is the chief characteristic of the organisation, an exception is found in the case of the Rajput, or military caste, which is based upon exogamous clans or tribes. These have in many cases fixed their own circle of intermarriage within the caste on considerations other than those current amongst the rest of the Brahmanic community. There are apparently ethnic reasons for this peculiarity, to which reference will be found below. § i6. The caste system being an institution essentially and exclu- sively Indian, the question arises whether its origin is to be sought amongst the Aryan immigrants or to be ascribed to those whom they found in possession of the field. Or, again, assuming that it is the resultant of the contact of the two social systems, what is the influence respectively attri- butable to each? The view now very generally held is that it is the product of no single cause, but that to its establishment in the form in which it now prevails, several factors, Aryan, pre-Aryan and hybrid, have at different times contributed. Of these by far the most prominent is the hieratic influence by which the main principles of the system were fixed and the standard set by which social position is graduated. That influence derives its authority entirely from the Vedic tradition, so it becomes neces- sary to see what information is obtainable from that source regarding the social organisation of the community amongst whom it originated. As in regard to all else concerning the earlier life of that community, reference must here be restricted to the Suktas of the Rksarhhita. These composi- tions must of course be defective in some respects, and from their character and the occasions they were intended to serve they cannot be expected to furnish a complete and detailed picture of the organisation of the body to which they relate. Nevertheless, the general conditions of life among those peoples were simple, and the relations between those who offered the sacrifice and the divine power whose good offices were solicited through it were so intimate and practical, that from the large collection of effusions handed down to posterity a very fair general notion can be formed of the leading facts relevant to the subject under consideration. § 17. It appears, then, that at the comparatively advanced stage of progress which the Vedic Aryas had attained by the time represented in even the earliest invocations of the collection, the community was or- ganised into clans, or groups of related families which, in turn, were collected into tribes, to which the clan was subordinate. Various other terms are met with imi)lying subdivision of either tribe or clan. They all refer to a pastoral life and indicate a by no means high degree of cohesion. Social Organisation. A. Historical. 13 Alongside of these sections were two classes or orders, evidently of later development: the nobles, headed by a Chieftain, and the ministers of religion, who conducted the public sacrifices. The mass of the community below these orders is collectively referred to as the "clans", or "peoples", always in the plural. The Family, as a unit, was strongly developed. Its worship was purely individual, strictly secluded from that of its neighbour, and conducted in private by the Paterfamilias conjointly with his wife. The tribal sacrifices were open to the "clans", and were conducted, at least in the stage to which the Suktas relate, in the presence of the Chief of the tribe, by a priest acting on his behalf. It seems probable that the ritual had by then reached a pitch of complication which necessitated the employment of trained professionals, but the performance of this act of faith was not otherwise the exclusive privilege of the sacerdotal class, for occasionally scions of ruling families officiated, and there are cases in which the right of the priest was disputed by others. It is obvious, however, that the duties fell more and more into the hands of trained experts, irrespective of the personal separatism which tends to attach itself to a sacrificial priesthood, as the ceremonial became more elaborate, and still more, after the invocations which accompanied it had ceased to be improvised and the compositions of the older Psalmists were recited in a regular liturgy. The experts closed their ranks against the layman, and became a class by themselves, whether they maintained their numbers by heredity or recruitment. It may reasonably be assumed, too, that the order of nobles, especially in the case of tribal chieftains, would gradually tend towards a hereditary character, though the frequency of intertribal strife and the migratory life of the communities militated against the con- solidation of political authority in such hands. § 18. So far, it may be observed, there is nothing in the above more or less hypothetical social organisation of this branch of the people con- ventionally called Aryan which materially differs from what is known to have prevailed amongst the others branches of whom the early history is on record. It was after the Vedic tribes had debouched upon the plains of north-western India that their social system assumed its unique and special features. Here, two new factors awaited them, each being insufficient by itself to determine the future course of their civilisation, though the combination of the two led to that result. The immigrants came into contact, in the first place, with a race far below them in physical and social characteristics; and they found themselves, in the second, in the presence of a vast and fertile expanse of country over which the inferiority of their opponents allowed them to spread freely. Whatever may have been the difficulties in dealing with the Dasyus which were at first ex- perienced by the Aryas, the superiority of the latter ultimately asserted itself in an incontestable manner, and those who resisted them were either reduced to subjection on their native soil, or rolled back before the ad- vance of the new-comers. That the Aryas failed to take advantage of their opportunities to establish themselves upon a national basis appears to be ascribable to the fact that, except in race, they were any thing but a homogeneous body. Tribe was constantly at war with tribe, and in their slow onward progress there had been no signs of combined general effort. It is true that after they had been some time in the plains larger aggre- gates were occasionally formed by military Chiefs, but they were unstable and perpetually being dispersed and re-formed in the vicissitudes of tribal 14 5- Ethnography. contests. The stable element, then, in the colonisation, was not supplied by the Court and its army, but by the village. This community seems to have been an institution of very early date amongst the Vedic tribes, and was established upon a clan, or even a family, basis, cemented by the possession of a definite tract of pasture or arable lapd. The opportunity for forming detached and independent settlements of this kind was fa- vourable. Land was plentiful, and whilst the supply of menial labour was provided by the Dasyus retained in subjection upon the soil of which they had been dispossessed, the danger of reprisal by the rest was removed as the more adventurous bodies of the Arj-as extended their frontier further and further into the interior. The necessity of combination for mutual defence against the alien waned therefore into insignificance. The tie of tribe, never very strong or well defined, would naturally be subordinated to that of territorial ownership, especially if the smaller unit were founded on blood-relationship and settled communal interests, and there was no common end which made an urgent appeal for collective action. In these circumstances, the dispersal of the original Vedic communities far and wide under new and more prosperous economic conditions tended towards the development of a parochial separatism, which possibly the presence of large bodies of alien helots may have helped to divert from wider political conceptions. The village community being left, on this hypothesis, to itself, organised its members on lines suggested by its requirements, which multiplied, of course, in proportion to the increased resources af- forded by a settled life. At the head of the social scale stood, as now, the possessor of land and beeves; at the foot, the stunted and swarthy alien. Between these extremes room had to be found for the increasing number of handicraftsmen, as well as for the hybrid progeny of the Arj-a by Dasyu women. What with the absorbing interests of this bucolic microcosm, and the absence of any specially powerful motive for political combination into larger units, the gap between the masses and the military dominant class tended to widen, and the fortunes of the ruling houses became a matter of comparatively little importance to the village. There remained, however, the tie of race. Whatever may have been the strength of this in pre-Vedic times, it became very prominent, as has been stated in the Introduction, when the Aryas came into collision with the Dasyus. The one term used collectively of the whole of the former community is the "colour" of the Arya as contrasted with that of their foes. In the in- vocations, until, that is, a period is reached when bodies of other and non-Vcdic Aryas appeared upon the scene, this characteristic is made practically equivalent to worship. The worship, in turn, was that of the Family, originally expanded on special occasions to the sacrifice offered under the auspices of the Chieftain for his tribe. The latter ceremony may easily have waned without affecting the essential daily rites of the house- hold, to which, indeed, the dispersal of the tribe and the constant presence of the Dasyu helots at the gate might be assumed to lend additional value. Nor, again, would the expansion and re-formations of the Ar^-an community tend to diminish the influence of the professional, or Brahmanic, ministry. This had probably grown into a closed body before the dispersal, but it was attached in the first instance to the person of the Chieftain, and obviously could not be otherwise than dependent upon those on whose behalf the priestly offices were undertaken. The Brahman, then, was bound to follow the fortunes of the rest of the community, and scatter as they Social Organisation. A. Historical. did. They, in turn, could not well dispense with the services he alone was competent to render. The language of the invocations had become obsolete, but texts from them were an essential part of everj- ceremony, and had passed, it would seem, into the stage of spells, potent only in the mouths of those who had professionally learnt them, a class which had taken care to prevent others from particijiating in that advantage. The value of this qualification increased, naturally, as the various bodies of those who placed their faith in it receded further from their traditional race-unity. There were other conditions, too, favourable to the growth of sacerdotal influence, and to the transfer of the attention of the hieratic order from the fluctuating fortunes of the military aristocracy, (by whom, moreover, its exclusive and privileged character was by no means uncon- tested,') to the more amenable medium of the incoherent democracy of the village, where the circumstances were evidently open to organisation. A good foothold was provided in the high value placed upon the purity of the family blood, the maintenance of which was the predominant object of the Vedic social system, as it seems to have been that of other Arj^an communities in their early days. The ideals and practice of the upper classes in regard to such a question constitute the hall-mark, as it were, of gentility — in the older sense of that term. Their natural ten- dency, accordingly, is to filter downwards through the society, each section adopting, as it attains a secured position, some measure of precaution against degradation through admixture with bodies which it considers its inferiors. Whether this sentiment of exclusiveness hardens into separatism or is merged in wider conceptions depends upon the circumstances in which the community happens to find itself during the early period of its settled existence. Pressure from outside may necessitate a political orga- nisation which reacts upon the domestic structure, or the struggle for life within the community itself may tend towards a more comprehensive grouping. In the advance of the Aryas into India neither of these motives seems to have been predominant. The way was open, therefore, for the confluence of the two peaceful currents which had throughout all vicis- situdes preserved their continuity — the sentiment of family purity and the hieratic administration of the ancestral worship. In regard to the former, the foundations of a closed order based on heredity had been laid, as mentioned above, amongst the priests and the nobles, at a verj' early period, and the bias in favour of such distinctions amongst the "clans" was necessarily accentuated by the contiguity of the dark races, on the one side, and the evolution within their own community of occupations un- recognised, because unknown, in Vedic tradition. Manual industries, it should be borne in mind, were invariably depreciated by the Arya of the west, where they were relegated to the servile population ; and in India, whether they were carried on by the Dasyu, the half-breeds, or the poorer members of the Clan, they could not fail to bring into prominence the possibility of contamination or abasement of position, either on racial grounds or by reason of the inherent or conventional impurity of the calling. In these circumstances, the idea which seems to have been adopted to prevent the flowing tide of impurity from submerging the cherished landmarks of pride of family and of race, was to establish an alliance between conventional purity of race or calling with the ancestral religion of which the Brahman was the sole exponent. The situation could be stereotyped by the establishment of the distribution of society upon divine i6 5. Ethnography. ordinance. It is true that as is now generally admitted, Caste, still less the Caste-system — which is the subject now in hand — did not exist amongst the Aryas of the Sukta period. The materials for it, however, had been provided by their descendants, and it only remained for the Brahmans, who were now in a position of power in the interior, to set their seal upon what they found ready to hand. The Purusa-Siikta of the Rgveda, decreed by modern scholars to be the product of the latest Vedic period, verging upon that of the early Brahmanic supremacy, is the Magna Charta of the caste system. In this composition, a divine origin is ascribed to four classes, the social position of each of which is thus irrevocably fi.xed. The two first are the Vedic orders above mentioned. Then comes a third, the title of which is derived from the Vedic term for the "clans" in the aggregate, whilst a place of degradation is made for the lower orders generally, in which, apparently, though the point is not certain, is merged the Dasyu community. Into this strictly demarcated classification were compressed all the numerous sections of the population existing at the time when the Brahman Procrustes undertook its application to the facts of everyday life. In such an arrangement it is obvious that the leading place in the social hierarchy would be assigned to the Brahman, and that any encroachment upon that supremacy would be amply provided against by the establishment of the principle of heredity in determining rank. Endogamy is here implied, as it is essential to the preservation of the family or caste purity that the mother of the heir should not be the medium by which any taint can be introduced into the blood. The principle under- lying the scheme of organisation seems to have received universal recog- nition, possibly because the standard of purity in regard to function had already been fixed by public opinion, whilst that applied to social inter- course, being bound up to a great extent with religious ceremonial, would be graduated in accordance with the example set by the class which prescribed or regulated that branch of caste duty. It seems doubtful, indeed, whether the two lower classes of the Brahmanic scheme ever had more than a literary existence, and were not a convenient expedient for severing the masses from the privileged classes. As a further security against a rivalry which in after times, perhaps through Buddhism, became trouble- some, the Brahmans, in due course, proclaimed the Ksatriya order also to be extinct. § 19. Assuming the above hypothesis to be well founded, it is clear that whilst the system upon which Indian society is organised is due to the influence of a hereditary priesthood, which acquired thereby a position of unparalleled supremacy, there is no need to "smell Jesuitry" in the history of its genesis, and to brand it as nothing more than the full-blown device of subtle and self-regarding Brahmanism. It appears, in fact, that the sacerdotal element in its elaboration was met at least half-way by the inclinations of the lay public, as evinced by the form their civilisation had begun to assume. The sacrosanct position of the Brahman being once established as the pivot of the system, the development of the latter precceded on the lines indicated by the code of purity adopted by the priestly order. Recognition of the inherent sacredness and spiritual autho- rity of the Brahman became essential, and even the great sectarian move- ments in derogation of the exclusive privileges of the sacerdotal class left caste untouched, and ended, accordingly, in the actual, if not nominal, acceptance of that condition as the inevitable apex of the system they Social Organisation. A. Historical. 17 retained. Doctrinal orthodoxy, indeed, could not have had much weight in the social balance after the pantheon had been enlarged to admit the claims of popular local deities, and the non-Aryan beliefs and ritual had been adapted to the flexible requirements of the Brahmans. Schism on religious grounds occurred, no doubt, in the earlier times, as it has con- tinued to do, and fresh subdivisions were formed in consequence, but these involved no change in caste or social position unless they happened to entail the violation of prescriptions relating to the purity of the family or the individual. These prescriptions are the operative part of the system, regulating as they do, marriage, food, occupation, and intercourse with the rest of the community. They are thus of a quasi-public character and the breach of any of them brings the stigma of pollution not only upon the individual but upon the family and the castefellows who come into contact with the offender. They are, moreover, comparatively easy of detection, and are thus well within reach of the discipline of the caste tribunal, a consideration of some moment amongst the masses, with whom detail looms higher than in classes where tradition is stronger and position more assured. Other factors contributed, of course, to the consolidation of the system; and amongst them have been included the devout belief in the omnipresence of supernatural agency, permeating all classes from top to bottom, and predisposing them to submission to priestly authority. There is, again, the doctrine of metempsychosis, which, regarding the present as the direct heir of the past, lends valuable support to the notion of predestined lot in the successive births into this world to which all are subject. The apathetic character of the people, also, is taken into account, and the marked absence amongst them of the "noble discontent" with their circumstances which spurs men on to efforts to improve them. It is open to question however, whether the two last preceded the institution of the caste system, or not. Be this as it may, the most potent factor is the Brahmanic standard of purity, and the desire to emulate it. This is the thread upon which is strung the astounding collection of otherwise independent communities into which the population of India is now divi- ded and which multiplies almost every year the number of its units. It underlies the demarcation by race, in the form in which it chiefly prevails, whether amongst the village menials or the Hill tribes which have become or are becoming, castes, as they abandon customs which are incompatible with it. In function, again, which in its lower grades is closely connected with race, the social gradations are based upon the relative cleanliness of the pursuit, though not without a glance at the ancestry of those who have taken to it. Religious differences only lead to the formation of a separate caste, when as above indicated, they are accompanied by a departure from the social observances of the original body, upwards, it may be, or in the opposite direction. The constant multiplication of castes, indeed, is attributable for the most part either to the assumption by a section of an existing caste of a higher standard of purity than the rest in occupation, marriage regulations, or food; or, on the other hand, to the excommunication of a section from fire and water for a violation of the caste rules regarding such matters. This fissiparity of castes is a subject of great intricacy to which space does not allow more than cur- sory reference here. It is necessary to make some mention of it, however, in order to show that, rigid and compressive as may be the framework Indo-Aryan Research. H. 5. 2 iS 5- Ethnography. of society imposed by the caste system, it does not preclude mobility within the multitudinous cells of which it is composed, and provides, too, for the increase of their number by accretion from outside. It is perhaps still more important to note that the converse process does not take place. A section once split off does not rejoin, nor do different castes coalesce with each other to form larger communities of the same character. With the object of illustrating these features of the system in actual operation, a brief description of the more representative castes has been included in the latter portion of this review. Through this more information may be gained, it is hoped, than can be conveyed by a series of general statements, each of which, like most general statements concerning India, requires abundant qualification to meet local exceptions. It must never be forgotten that India is not a country but a collection of countries, and though caste as an institution is universal, and the basis of the system which has been the subject of the foregoing review is the same throughout, the form assumed by the superstructure raised upon that foundation differs materially in different regions. If any generalisation be sustainable, it would be, perhaps, that caste tends to be strong where the population is generally prosperous, and also where the system was adopted after it had reached maturity among those who were the means of introducing it. It tends to be weak, on the other hand, where the means of sub- sistence are less abundant, and occupations, therefore, cannot be so strictly demarcated as they are under more favourable conditions. The stage of civilisation, too, attained by the time Brahmanisation set in, seems to have been a factor of some weight in determining the extent to which recognition should be accorded to local customs and beliefs. t; 20. Thus, in the south-Dravidian part of the peninsula, the caste system flourishes in full vigour; but it has simply been engrafted upon Tamil institutions, and, as far as the masses of the people are concerned, little change has been effected by it in their food or their special regu- lations regarding marriage ; still less in their worship, in which the Brah- man takes no part except where one of the more powerful of the local maleficent goddesses has been adopted as a manifestation of some Puranic divinity. The lower orders there occupy a position of degradation differing from that of the corresponding castes further north in that a good many of them do not accept it; and having a working tradition of former power, if not supremacy, they are continually making efforts to get their claim to a higher rank recognised by their actual superiors. The subdivisions among them increase accordingly. On the other hand, the artisan castes are here found united to an extent unknown in the present day elsewhere. This combination is of long standing, and is probably the origin of the Right and Left-handed distribution of castes which is only found amongst the Tamil people. The South, again, having always been fertile in sectarian disputes, doctrinal schism amongst the local Brahmans has resulted in some instances in separation in social intercourse, another development not found elsewhere. The Rrahmanism of Tclingana has considerably less of the pre-Aryan clement, left in it, probably because there was partial colonisation of the Andhra region through Orissa or otherwise, by immi- grants from the Ganges valley, before the Dravida region was reached. The inhabitants, accordingly, though lax in their observances compared to the Brahmanists of the North, consider themselves higher in position than the Tamil castes, and when settled amongst the latter, avoid inter- Social Organisation. A. Historical. ig mixture as far as possible. The greater prosperity of the South, however, has given to its caste system a strength and complexity not found in the present day in the less favourable conditions of the upland tracts. Along the East coast the Tamil features prevail almost till they join the Orissa system, which, probably from the isolation and the timid character of the population, has the reputation of being the most bigotted and priest-ridden of its kind. In Lower Bengal, the system is an exotic, as in Madras, and was introduced long after it had reached maturity in upper India. It took root however, under different auspices. The country was occupied by the Aryas or their hybrid descendants in the course of their general expansion down the valley, and the population encountered consisted of the wild tribes of the forest or amphibious dwellers in the Delta, Kol or Mongoloid, easily subjected, like the Dasyu of the north, and not, like the Tamil communities, long settled on an agricultural basis, to be approached by missionary enterprise only, not by armed force. The subject classes seem to have been left to assimilate their organisation to that of their superiors without tradition or authority to guide them. When, at length, the official graduation of society was taken in hand by one of the more powerful local rulers, the flood of Islam overran the country before the new re- gulations had time to gain foothold amongst the people. It appears, there- fore, from physical features and the titles of caste subdivisions that bodies were formed either by race, afterwards split up by function, or by com- munity of function overriding race differences and often determined by locality. The relations between these bodies, therefore, are more than usually indefinite, and owing to the absence of a landholding aristocracy of the military order and the comparative weakness of the Brahman immi- grants, changes or claims to change of rank are more frequent here than in any other part of India. Amongst the lower classes these pre- tensions are usually based, as in the Tamil country, upon tradition, often not without foundation, of a former position far above that now assigned to them. For generations they have been deposed, but the prosperity they enjoy in modern times induces them to revive their dormant claim. Still more immature in its development is the caste system, if so it may be called, which prevails in the Assam valley. Setting on one side modern immigrants from Bengal and the Brahman, there is but one community of even nominal Aryan origin. It is now held to represent the early Aryan immigrants, who reached the seclusion of the Brahmaputra valley before the caste system had been developed in Bengal or wherever these co- lonists originated. In their case the development was apparently retarded, first, by pressure of Mongoloid tribes around them, conducing to a united front; and, later, to the hold which Buddhism obtained for some time over this tract. The above caste, or racial community, included all the ordinary professions but they were not formed into castes, and even now that process is by no means complete. Even the higher classes are lax, too, as to intermarriage, and visit the mesalliance of a girl upon her individually, not upon her relations, as would be done in other parts of India. The Brahman, too, falls into line with the rest, and disregards the stricter rules of his order as to marriage. Special arrangements exist for the incorporation into castes of the indigenous population; and the fa- cilities they afford for a subsequent rise in rank on increased observance of conventional purity are unwontedly liberal. The same spirit is manifested in the relations between orthodox Brahmanism and the Kol and Dravidian 20 5 Ethnography. tribes of the Central Belt. The tribes of Chutia Nagpur tend to get merged into the Bengal system, and those of the Satpura and Vindhya, where conversion seems to lead to more comi)letc breach with the older regime, gradually mix with the lower castes of cultivators in the ])lains. Between the Jamna and the Ghogra or even the Kosl, the caste system seems to have developed upon what may be termed more normal lines than in any other part of India, as is, perhaps to be expected from the proximity to its birth-place. The process of evolution was seriously interrupted, however, by the Muslim occupation, which scattered the leaders of society and swept away many old landmarks. In course of time, the old order was reestablished in full force, though the traces of the cataclysm have never been (juite effaced, esjjccially amongst the functional castes. It is worth noting that in the u])per Jamna tract and well into the eastern Panjab caste remains entirely unaffected by conversion to Islam. It is held by some, indeed, that by the elimination of the Rajput, or fighting man, the Muslim left the way more open to the Brahman, whom they disdainfully ignored. At all events, the present social conditions of the region longest and most absolutely held by the IMoghal regime appear to confirm con- clusively the evidence afforded by the relations between Brahmanism and the pre -Aryan worship of the south and centre, to the effect that the hold of caste upon the popular mind is altogether detachable from reli- gious doctrine, and rests, as indicated above, upon its social restrictions. In the western Panjab caste is weaker than in any other tract, and this seems to be attributable to the combination of two influences. First, there is the tribal sentiment, derived from the vicinity of the Pathan and Baluch, referred to earlier in this work. It found a ready acceptance amongst the Rajput and Jat races of the plains, who were themselves organised upon a tribal basis, with a lightly worn veil of caste thrown over the arrangement. Then, again, the struggle for life in a comparatively infertile country conduced to the mobility of occupation to an extent seldom ne- cessary in the richer tracts to the eastwards. The adoption of a lower class of calling under pressure of need leads, of course, to the loss of social position, but not, as it would on the Jamna, to excommunication. Caste is also weak in the lower Himalaya, but for a totally different reason. These valleys are the only tracts to which the Muslim never penetrated, and, under the auspices of refugee Rajputs, society is there constituted upon a system untouched by foreign influence. The Chief is emphatically the fountain of honour, and can uplift or degrade a caste or even a family as he pleases. In the Panjab Hills, therefore, caste is remarkably fluid. Every community above the menial aspires to rise by some means or other to the rank of that above it, whilst it takes wives from and eats with, that immediately below it. The various tracts which have been mentioned present the most strongly marked peculiarities in their caste systems, but in each of the rest there will be found certain characteristics in which it differs from others. Into these it is not proposed to enter except cursorily. In Sindh, for instance, the whole population embraced Islam, and the only large indigenous Brahmanic caste left is that of the traders. The rest, however, have maintained both racial and functional divisions regulated generally on caste lines. The adjacent peninsulas of Gujarat have been frequently occupied by aliens, and this fact, together with the fertility of the main- land, tends first, to great subdivision of castes, the titles of the sec- Social Organisation. B. Descriptive. tions indicating intermi.xturc of races as in Lower Bengal, and then to strict observance of caste discipline, as in the Gangetic region. The Konkan, too, has had from time to time a strong influx of foreign Brahmans, and this, along with its isolation, have helped to rivet firmly the priestly yoke upon the people. In Rajputana, too, as is natural considering the history and character of the ruling classes, Brahmanism is in high honour, though the difficulty of making a living in the desert portion of the tract allows a latitude of occupation among the poorer castes similar to that which, for the same reason, prevails amongst the probably kindred tribes of the middle Indus. Distinctions such as these are illustrated as far as space allows in the following pages of this work, where, in the description of its main constituent parts, is shown in actual operation the system of which the development and conjectural origin have been outlined above. B. Descriptive. § 21. Regarding the subject in its ethnographic aspect, it is obvious that it must be a task of extraordinary, almost insuperable, difficulty to reduce to anything like accurate numerical terms the component parts of so vast and complex an organisation as that sketched above. It should be borne in mind that the object of the Census is to obtain a record not only of scientific value in the service of ethnography, but of practical importance in the every -day administration of the country. The social position and the numerical strength of different sections of the community are essential facts in connection, for instance, with public instruction or with measures for the promotion of the comfort or convenience of the locality. The Courts of Justice, again, are frequently called upon to decide questions of rank or privilege in which the relative numbers of the litigant parties are points relevant to the inquir>-, and which cannot be safely left to the evidence of the disputants, in view of the "megalomania" which is probably at the bottom of the whole controversy. Even the identification of an individual cannot be satisfactorily established in the case of many of the more important social divisions by less than two or even three, successive questions, and often the credibility of a witness is decided by a casual detail of caste convention. On these considerations, and with an eye to the known probability of error in the direction of either excessive generality or excessive minuteness of description, provision was made at the Census for the return of social divisions under two headings, first, the main body, such as caste or tribe, and, secondly, the subdivision to which the individual may belong. In the larger communities, indeed the latter is the more distinctive designation, and was adopted, accordingly, as the unit of compilation in the returns prepared for local use. Lower than this it is unnecessary', for administrative purposes, that the inquiry should go; but it must be recognised that from the ethnological standpoint, the more minute subdivisions of the community are often more pregnant of suggestion or information than those of which they form a part, and must be adequately dealt with in any special investigation, such as that now engaging the attention of those employed upon the Indian Ethnographical Survey. It must also be understood that neither the Provincial nor the Imperial returns claim to present anything beyond a partial and very imperfect picture of the astounding fissiparity of the Brahmanic social system in the 22 5 Ethnograph\-. full vigour of its present existence. The Imperial Table, even after a somewhat drastic process of compilation, contains nearly 2,400 separate items, and the project of expanding it to the full limits of the subject inevitably calls to the memory of the expert the concluding verse of the Gospel according to St John. Take, for instance, the feature of endogamy alone. Every subdivision recorded in a Provincial Table, covers, if the main body be widely spread, many others, none of which intermarries with the rest. Not only so, but the main body itself does not recognise any social tie with the body bearing the same name located in a distant part of the country, even though, as sometimes, happens, the same verna- cular language may be spoken by both. Each of these local subdivisions, moreover, is divided into its respective endogamous sections; some of them professing a different religion, and occupying, perhaps, quite a different position in the social hierarchy of the neighbourhood from that of the synonymous section elsewhere. Even the Provincial groups, therefore, subjoined to the general aggregate in the Table, convey an impression of homogeneity not in correspondence with the actual fact. § 22. With the above qualifications and reserve, then, the figures to be found in the Imperial returns must be taken as providing as trustworthy information as is now available upon this branch of the subject. In the Tables, the items are arranged in alphabetical order, a form of record which has its advantages from an official point of view, in that it raises no awkward questions as to position or precedence; and, if accompanied, as in the Madras list, by a brief practical account of the principal divisions, it is useful for reference on individual cases. There, however, its function ends, and some form of coordination becomes necessary before all these isolated nuggets of information can be got to collectively yield their tribute towards the common object of illustrating the main characteristics of the social organisation of the different regions of India. It is as well to admit at the outset that in view of the varied origin and history of the social divisions in question and of the various forms the social system has assumed, no classification upon a single a definite principle is possible. It is equally judicious to assume that, taking into consideration the diverse and often mutually inconsistent theories held as to the basis and general principles upon which the system rests, no such classification, even were it possible, would be universally accepted. Race, consanguinity, function, creed and policy cover respectively a considerable portion of the ground, but no one of them covers the whole or can be made the standard by which the divisions as they now exist can be graduated on the social scale. It might be thought that in view of the extreme value attached to conventional purity, and the minute rules in regard to it by which the intercourse between the different sections of the community is, by unanimous public opinion in each locality, undeviatingly regulated, a touchstone might be found in it by which social rank might be assayed. This, however, is not the case. Irrespective of the difficulty of obtaining a formal decision on individual cases, owing to prejudice and the general ignorance of the position of classes below them which prevails amongst those who would ordinarily be consulted, there is a marked difference in practice in regard to inter- communion between the greater part of Continental India and the Peninsula, and even between province and province. The criterion which would be adopted would be whether or not certain higher classes would take from the community in question water or certain kinds of food, and these lines Social Organisation. B. Descriptive. 23 of demarcation are in most cases so far apart, including that is, so many communities in each class, that they afford little or no graduation of the masses respectively enclosed within them, and without further internal subdivisions the groups are of little practical significance. Now, for the purpose of this review, which is mainly to render the facts assimilable by those who have not been brought into personal contact with the civili- sation of India, the basis of that subdivision will be found in function, overlying in some cases a distant but traceable background of race. It will be found that, as a rule, graduation upon this basis is in general harmony with the current conceptions regarding hereditary- puritj' which prevail in India. The term function, it should be explained, is not limited to the occupation actually followed in the present day, but extends to that traditionally ascribed to the body in question, and is more frequently than not implied in the title of the caste. This expansion of meaning is neces- sitated by the mobility of occupation in modern times, on the one hand, and, on the other, by the consideration that whilst function usually takes rank in relation to purity according to the character of the service per- formed or of the material handled, there are numerous cases where the public estimate is formed upon the origin of the community by whom the occupation is pursued, and thus takes its stand upim racial considerations rather than upon the intrinsic nature of the pursuit. Elsewhere, again, race alone is the determining factor; but here the community, as a rule, stands, as explained above outside the Brahmanic system. The influence of the latter, however, extends far beyond the limits of the Brahmanical religion. The definition of caste quoted above is therefore applicable without serious modification of its essentials to communities of not only Jains and Sikhs, but, except in the North-west, even of the Muslim persuasion, as they rise in wealth and in the power which wealth, even under Brahmanism, is able to exercise. These instances have been included, accordingly, in the review which follows, important differences of religion being duly noted against them. As regards the review itself, it is not intended to serve as a Glossary-, or to give an account of all the castes and tribes which find place in the Imperial returns, but merely to bring to notice the principal bodies under each of the heads into which Indian society has, for the purpose of exposition, been here marshalled on the lines laid down above. § 23. At the head of the list are placed certain groups of an exceptional character, whose position differs somewhat from that of the rest. The Brahman naturally stands first, as the keystone of the whole social scheme. The Rajput, again, is an order of nobility rather than a caste in the ordinary acceptation of the term. With, but after, them may be taken the trading and writing classes, both of which in Upper India, though not in the South, claim distant connection with the Rajput, and who, with the Brahman, con- stitute what are known as the Educated classes of India. Here, too, may be placed the religious devotee, or mendicant orders, who, by virtue of their profession have abjured caste, though in more than one instance only to re-form themselves into something very like a caste of their own. In dealing with the masses of the population, the first fact of which cognisance should be taken in regard to the general arrangement of the castes is the remarkable preponderance of the agricultural clement. Culti- vation is the premier employment of the country, and to occupy a holding is the main object of the bulk of the rural population. In the little oligarchy, therefore, known as the village community-, the landed classes stand at the 24 5- Ethnography. top, and where, as in all but the east of India and the tracts still under the forest tribes, that community exists in an organised form, the classes included therein are all subservient to the needs of the peasantr)'. Each of these economic units contains a recognised body of artisans, minor pro- fessionals and menials, to whom is assigned respectively a small share of the village land or of its annual produce. Mixed in with these, are found the various large bodies of fishers, cattle-breeders and others, some of whom hover between the fields and their eponymous means of subsistence. To the village, then, as it is understood in India, is dedicated the second of the main divisions of the list, followed by a small group of minor, or subsi- diary professional castes between village and town. In the third are placed the castes exercising functions specially me of the ce- remonial functions of the Brahman, are either not recognised by other Brahmans, or are relegated by them to a degraded position, inferior, in reality, to that to which many of the non-Brahman castes are admitted. The acme of subdivision in combination with ceremonial exclusiveness, is probably reached among the Kanaujia, of whom it is said in their native Province, "Three Kanaujia, thirteen cooking-fires". The Gurjara Brahmans, again, are popularly credited with S4 divisions, but this being a popular expression of multitude in general, the number actually found, viz. 79, may be taken as fairly correct, especially as all the larger items in that lengthy list have their respective sub-castes. The Brahmans of the Dekkan are perhaps as little split up into sections as any, but on the coast-strip of Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 27 the Konkan the subdivision is more minute, owing, probably, to the foreign strain introduced from time to time. The Brahmans of Bengal and Madras, where the system is of later introduction, hide a complicated interior under a comparatively small number of main divisions, especially in the latter, where caste has been affected by the doctrinal schisms of which the clouth since the days of S'aiikaracarya and Ramanuja, has been prolific. § 26. It was stated above that the subdivision of Brahman communi- ties is often traceable to differences in regard to food and ceremonial. These, in turn, depend to a great extent upon function and the means of livelihood accessible. Strictly speaking, the Brahman, as pointed out earlier in this work, is by origin a functional order, but with the ex- pansion of the Arya population in post-Vedic times and the growth of the Brahmanic ct)mmunity beyond the need of the layman for its specific ministrations, great latitude had to be allowed, no doubt, from a very early period. In the present day, within the fairly wide limits which he himself has set, the Brahman is represented in a large proportiim of what may be called the upper and middle class occupations of India. But whichever of these he may take up, his inherent qualities are unabated, and he is still entitled to the homage of the rest of the community, and remains the accredited intermediary between man and the supernatural. In the latter capacity his bare living is assured to him without need to work for it, because in all formal rites such as those connected with birth, marriage, death, expiation or thanksgiving, the provision of a meal for a certain number of Brahmans is an essential and costly feature. In the more pros- perous parts of the country', accordingly, there is usually a plentiful supply of Brahmans of whom it has been said that "they exist only to be fed". On every side are to be found subdivisions which, in the eyes of their compeers, have fallen from grace by participating in the feasts of wealthy but impure clients. In another direction there are instances on record where the number of local Brahmans available for a ceremony of this sort not being equivalent to the aspirations of the Chieftain interested in it, the quorum has been made up by him by a special creation out of such lower material as was at hand. Service at a temple, it should be noted, is not undertaken by the better class of Brahman, as it is held to be degrading, and left, accordingly, to those low in station. In several cases the claim to be accounted a Brahman rests entirely upon the per- formance of those duties. The inference drawn from this estimation of temple service is that the divinities in question are those of the non-Arya, incorporated from time to time into the Brahmanic pantheon, as the com- munity which reverenced them was brought to adopt the social system of the higher race. It is probable that the distinction drawn between the acceptance of offerings by a Brahman in requital for specific services and those made to him on general grounds has its root in the same tradition; for whilst to the donor offerings of any kind to a Brahman are held to be productive of spiritual merit, only one of the lower class of the order will accept gifts for exorcising evil spirits, averting the baleful influences of an eclipse or certain combinations of stars, reciting the appropriate texts for pilgrims at a bathing place, or helping at a funeral, and the like offices. The secular pursuits affected by the Brahman vary considerably ac- cording to whether the caste is settled in the locality in large numbers, whether the tract is prospering, or whether the Brahman first came into 28 5- Ethnography. it as a pioneer and colonist or as a propagandist or an exile from another centre. Political employment has been congenial to the Brahman from the time when the Purohita, or family sacrificer, was treated by the Rajan as his confidential adviser in the Sukta period, and the caste has con- tinued to throw up from time to time men who have been distinguished for their administration of Native States. The great chance of the Brahman came, of course, under the Pcsva rule, when the whole of the military organisation built up by the Marathas fell to the disposal of the Citpavan Brahman of the Konkan; and for seventy years or more, the Dekkan was dominated from Poona, and the whole of the administration was conducted by the local and the coast Brahman. Even in the present day, the Maratha Brahman has almost a monopoly of clerical employment throughout the Dekkan, Konkan and Karnatic, and with the traditions of former supre- macy to encourage him, he stands quite in the van of his order in in- telligence and general ability. In some other parts of the country the Brahman is the only class besides the trader who can read and write to any practical purpose, and he thus becomes, of course, the scribe, if not the official accountant, of the village community. Even in the tracts where a serious rival is found in a professional writing class, the Brahman usually has a share in the State appointments to which the "literary proletariat" of India look mainly for their subsistence. Of the learned professions. Law and Instruction arc the more attractive to this caste. A few take up the lower branches of Engineering, and still fewer the practice of Medicine, a following which is to a great extent barred to them by reason of caste- scruples in regard to the surgical training involved. In commerce they have not made their way beyond the universal venture in lending money to their neighbours, to which every Indian capitalist, according to his resources, is inclined. The Brahman shares, also, the general aspiration to own land, either as an investment or as a possession honorific in the eyes of the lay world. Wherever they have settled in large masses, as in the Gangetic Doab and Oudh, or in compact local colonies, which pro- bably preceded their advance as a sacerdotal body, they have taken to cultivation on the same lines as the ordinary peasantry, except that they but very rarely put their hand to the plough, though they go as far as standing upon the crossbar of the harrow to lend their weight to that operation. Owing to this caste-imposed restriction, probably, it may be noted that wherever the Brahman has settled otherwise than as a part of a large general community, he is the centre of a well-defined system of predial servitude, his land being cultivated for him by hereditary serfs of undoubtedly Dasyu descent. This is the case with the Masthan of Orissa and Gujarat, and with the Haiga or Havika of Kanara, and the Nambutiri of the Malabar coast, all of whom have settled in fertile country. Where the pressure of circumstances is very severe, as in the desert States of Rajputfina, ihe Brahman cultivator not only does the whole of his own work, including ploughing, but even sells his labour to other more fortunate occupants. A military career may appear to be somewhat alien to the tra- ditions and inclinations of a sacerdotal class, nevertheless in the vicinity of the Ganges it has proved by no means unattractive to the Brahman peasantry. The Bhuinhar, or Babhan, of the south eastern parts of the upper valley, are credited by some with Brahman ancestry, which endo- wed them with enough of the Ksatriya qualities to enable them to push forward in advance of the main body of their race, and to hold against the Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 29 Kol, or other previous possessor, the land they still occupy. The nickname of Pandy, again, bestowed upon the rebel troops collectively by the British soldier, is no other than Pandc or Pahre, the title of the sub- division of the Kanaujia Brahmans from which a high proportion of the recruits of this caste were then enlisted. Since 1S57 it has been found that minute caste-scruples as to diet and contact arc incompatible with the exigencies of modern field service, whilst the personal sanctity of the Brahman private is apt to turn out inimical to the due observance of re- gimental discipline. Amongst the Muhial Brahmans of the Panjab, therefore, the pride of caste has given way before the taste for the profession of arms, and the would-be recruit of this community drops his Brahmanhood when enlisting, and is enrolled under some other designation. In former days, when, as under the Pcsvas, Brahmans were themselves at the head of the forces, and not in subordination to the foreigner, and when war was carried out on very different lines from those of to-day, commanders of this caste acquitted themselves worthily, and showed both resource and courage in the field. !< 27. Rajputs (10,040,800). In this case, the community is unmis- takcably military in its origin, with the old baronial attributes of landed- estate and leadership of an armed force. People are returned at the Census under this designation in considerable numbers from all parts of India except the South, but nine-tenths of them hail from north of the Vindhya and west of the Kosi. The Provinces of Agra and Oudh alone account for 3,950,000. In the Panjab there are 1,820,000, and in Bihar, about 1,200,000. The cradle of the Rajput is the tract named after him, not, however, as it is limited in the present day, but extending from the Jamna to the Narbada and Satlaj , including, therefore, the whole of Malva, Bundelkhand, and parts of Agra and the Panjab. From the northern parts of this tract there seems to have been an early movement of conquest up the western rivers of the Panjab, as far as the Himalaya and Kashmir, whereby was laid the foundation of the predominance of the tribes still in possession. With this exception, the presence of Rajputs in other parts of India seems due to their expulsion from their ancient seats. The le- gendary occupation of Kathiavad from Mathura is ascribed to an attack delivered from the south and east. Successive inroads of Scythians and Hunas caused a movement to the south-west, into Gujarat; but the prin- cipal and most definite migration followed upon the Muslim conquests of the nth and 12th centuries, which drove large bodies of Rajputs to- wards the Himalaya and eastwards across the Ganges into the Doab and Oudh. From thence, as well as from Bundelkhand, they spread into the adjacent parts of Bihar, especially those north of the Ganges. A certain number, too, are found in the north of the Central Provinces, where the boundaries between British territory and Central India are very ciimpli- cated. Beyond the above limits the original stock is Udt found, and even within them, it has in some cases been materially watered with local blood, when the distance from the race-centre makes the operation fairly safe, and the community is sufficiently well established to maintain its marriage connection at its conventional level. The presence of so many Rajputs in other parts of India is accounted for by the fact that the title, originally, in all probability, derived from function, denotes, as has been stated, an order of hereditary nobility, access to which is still obtainable, and whose circle, accordingly, is being constantly enlarged upon much the same con- 30 5- Ethnography. sideratiuns as of yore. The essentials of the position are the chieftainship of a tribe or clan and the command of an armed force, with the possession of a substantial landed estate and a scrupulous regard for the strict letter of Brahmanical regulatiijns as to marriage, domestic customs and inter- course with other classes. It was on this basis that in the Panjab the Jat was differentiated from the Rajput, and certain castes in Oudh and its neighbourhood rose above their fellows. In other cases, the above re- quisites being established, the elaboration of the claim u> affiliation to one of the recognised Rajput clans is left to the ingenuity of a competent Brahman with the aid of an experienced bard or genealogist. For example, on the adoption of Brahmanism by a large portion of the Mongoloid po- pulation of Manipur, the chief and his military retainers passed into the rank of Ksatriya, and to the number of about iSoooo, appear under that title in the last Census returns. The leading families of various K61 tribes of Chutia Nagpur, again, are constantly, in Col. Dalton's phrase, "being refined into Rajputs" and sometimes do not wait for 'times' effacing fingers" to conceal the change, and too often ignore the essentially Rajput system of clan-exogamy in favour of their pristine tribal arrange- ments. There is, in fact, no section of the Brahmanic hierarchy into which recruitment from the outside has been more extensive or to which the claims to membership have been so numerous. The latter is especially tHfe case in the tracts where the caste system has been imposed as an exotic in comjiaratively modern times. In Lower Bengal, for instance, such claims are remarkably frequent, and this is attributed to the adoption of the ready-made caste-system by a number of different racial stocks without its graduation being authoritatively regulated by a powerful Chief under the guidance of a council of influential Brahmans. In Madras, again, caste was engrafted upon an already well-established civilisation to which it had to accommodate itself according to circumstances. In the former, therefore, the Rajput, except as before stated in Bihar, is redolent of the local soil, and takes rank therefore below certain other castes which have come to the front under the peaceful conditions of a Province where arms have long succumbed to the tongue and pen. These classes, therefore, do not lay claim to the title of Rajput, but to that of Ksatriya, implying a po- sition less definite and less likely to be disputed by existing ct)mmunities. Similarly in the South, whither the Rajput never penetrated, unless it might be in the form of representatives of more or less evanescent dynasties, the rank of Ksatriya is claimed almost exclusively by members of the labouring and toddy-drawing castes, who justify their pretensions by the undisputed fact that their ancestry furnished the rank and file of the archers and other infantry of the local potentate. Instances will be found in latter parts of this Chapter in which the status of Ksatriya is claimed by many castes of far higher position in the present day than those just quoted. Various legends are current proving that whilst the Puranic as- sertion of the total extirpation of the Ksatriya is true, the ancestry of the claimants in question had somehow or other escaped the general destruction, and are the lineal inheritors of the hypothetical Vedic rank, although the majority of them obtrusively avoid any occupation savouring of war. This much appears to be true, that there was a long breach between the heyday of the post-Vedic ruling classes and the genesis of the Rajput. The former were apparently staunch supporters of Buddhism, in its inception a movement in their favour, whilst the latter arose with Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. the forces which deposed that religion in India, and established their po- sition upon the ruins of the States which had professed it. The ground for the evolution of a new military nobility seems to have been prepared by the establishment in Upper India of successive sovereignties of S'aka race. These professed Huddhism, and were thus antagonistic to the orthodo.x Brahmanism. But after they had carried their arms far into the country, and the Panjab and its neighbourhood became their principal seat of government, they seem to have become affected by the prevailing social atmosphere, with which, as has been stated, the tenets of Buddhism were by no means out of harmony. One of their monarchs, indeed, is claimed as their founder by more than one of the chief clans of the present-day Rajputs. In the continual disturbances which occurred between the first century before Christ and the downfall of the principal Scythian dynasties in the 7th century A D, the Brahmanic powers were wont to invoke the aid of any arm, Indian or foreign, which might promote the defeat of their rivals. The incorporation of such leaders into their ranks could be effected without much difficulty, firstly, through the prestige of a victory in the good cause, and, again, through the fiction, dating from a far earlier period in Indian history, that the foreign tribes which pressed upon the frontiers of Brahmanism were themselves Brahmanical back- sliders of the warrior order, who had lost their position by reason of their neglect of the orthodox rites. Upon the hypothesis that the suppression of Buddhism was an act of faith entitling the protagonists to be received back into the fold, it became possible to combine gratitude with policy, and, by the substitution of a new designation, Rajput, for the old one of Ksatriya, to effectively demarcate from the former state of things, the new order established under the uncontested supremacy of sacerdotalism. None of the Rajputs prove their pedigree further back than the 5th century of the Christian era, and four of the leading tribes of the present day, known as the Agnikula, or Fire-clans, derive their origin from a specific act of creation under Brahmanic auspices, whereby the sun and fire- worshipping Hijna or Gurjara was converted into the blue blood of Raj- putana, and became the forefathers of the Sisodia, Cauhan, Parmar, Parihar, and Solariki or Calukya, and perhaps of the Kachvaha lines. Other cases of similar elevation are to be found, and, considering the dominant position held by Scythian communities in the north and west of India for many centuries, together with the affinity between their worship and that of a popular branch of that of the Brahmans, and the common northern origin of the two races, it is not improbable that the upper classes, at all events, of the new comers should have identified themselves with the correspon- ding classes of those amongst whom their lot had been permanently cast. There are, moreover, special features of the structure and customs of Rajput and Jat and other northern communities in India which distinguish them from the Brahmanic masses of the interior, and may be attributed to difference of race, perpetuated by many generations of resistance to attacks from the outside. The least that can be said is that a race-con- nection of the above description could not possibly have existed so long and then faded out without leaving substantial traces of its passage upon the people subject to it. It may be added that Rajput dynasties did not rise to power until sometime after the Hiina supremacy had been broken in the 6th century, and that the genealogies of the tribes now ruling States start from about the 7th century. The contests with the Muslim 32 5- Ethnography. invader of a few centuries later had the effect of consolidating the Rajput devotion to the scrupulous observance of Brahmanic injunctions as to marriage and intercourse with other castes which specially distinguished them from their foreign oppressors ; and to the present day, they stand out from the rest of the community in the high value they attach to these matters. Like the Brahmans, they are greatly subdivided, but with this important difference, that whereas the Brahmans may only marry within the subdivision, the Raj])ut may only marry without it, though within the Rajput pale. The larger subdivision is, in fact, taking the place of the smaller as the circle of prohibited affinity. Conjecturally, this difference in practice may be due to the fact that the Rajput clan is definitely tra- ceable in its origin to a historic leader or family, involving, therefore, a tradition of blood-kinship the more vivid from its being associated with territorial ownershi]). The tribe or order, again, being spread continuously and in considerable numbers over a large area, with uniform conceptions as to rank and function, the marriage field is a wide one, and the gra- duation of each unit in its social position has been arranged on conside- rations which override the normal limitations of caste. The regulations as to intermarriage, therefore, though exceedingly strict, have a wider scope than among most of the other Brahmanical bodies and are in some cases arbitrarily imposed upon itself by the clan on considerations of rank alone. So strict indeed, arc they in regard to what has been called hypergamy, that amongst the ujiper grades of Rajput society, the girl is held to be a burden upon the resources of the family to an extent that leads to reprehensible means of preventing her from reaching a nubile age. The scarcity of brides thus produced, combined with the expenses of the marriage, tend to the formation of left-handed unions with lower castes, the offspring whereof ranks with the mother, or, where numerous and recognised, constitutes a new caste by itself. The latter is the case in the west of India, where the bastards become court dependants. In Orissa, they all rank as Rajputs. In Nejial there is the curious instance of the children of a Hill woman by a Brahman becoming Rajput, and forming the kernel of the large military population of the State. In the Kangra Himalaya, where the continuity of tradition and lineage has been less interrupted than anywhere else, the Chief is a law not only unto himself but unto his subjects in regard to social position and caste, so that the rank of Rajput depends very much upon the royal favour. Considering the part played by Islam in the dispersal of the Rajput ruling families, it is worth noting that in the Panjab, not only have three fourths of this caste embraced that religion, in both the west and east of the Province, but that conversion has had no effect upon the social position of the Rajput. In the east, where Brahmanic influence is supreme, change of religion is said to have no result upon caste regulations. In the west, where the Pathan atmosphere predominates, the scheme of social restric- tions and prescriptions is Brahmanic, but, as in the east, the sanction by which it is maintained is that of the tribe, not of the caste, and inter- marriage and so on is governed by the position of the body in the present day, rather than by considerations of origin, such as are involved in caste. From what has been said above it may be inferred that the func- tional scope of the Rajput is but narrow. Traditionally, he rules, fights, owns land and indulges in field-sjiorts. In practice, he carries out this scheme of life as far as circumstances allow, but the rank and file of his Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 33 order are cultivators, and not among the most efficient of their class. The Rajput has the same objection as the Brahman to handling the plough, and the strict seclusion in which the women of the caste are kept deprives him of an aid in the minor agricultural operati(ms which in the lower castes is often most valuable. In the Gangetic regions the Rajjiut still enlists in considerable numbers in the "Hindustani" regiments of the British army. He often, too, dons the official belt as a constable or messenger, in upper India and Gujarat. On the whole, however, the general disincli- nation of the caste to avail itself of the facilities for instruction now within its reach is placing it at a disadvantage as compared with the middle classes, in the modern conditions of Indian life. Only the subordinate grades of official and professional employment are open to them, and in the army, also, promotion beyond a certain rank depends now-a days upon educa- tion, and the Rajput is losing by the competition of Sikh, Palhan and Gurkha in the profession of his choice, and is far outdistanced in civil avocations by those whom his caste prevents him from acknowledging to be even rivals. ij 28. Trading Castes (io,6So,8oo): This is the first of the distinctively functional groups to lie brought under review. It is not, however, merely a collection of communities each with its separate designation, like those which have preceded it, but contains some general titles denoting the occupation of trading, but which do not include all the castes following that calling in the locality where it prevails. The leading example of these is the Banya or Vania, of upper and western India, under which name are included nearly all the trading classes, but not important castes like the Khatri and Arora in the Panjab, or the Bhatia and Lohana of Sindh. There are grounds for thinking that the exclusion is due to differences of race. The Khatri and Arora, like the Banya, derive their origin from Rajputana, in the larger sense in which that term was used in the preceding paragraph, but the latter affiliate themselves directly to certain clans of Rajputs, whilst the former refer themselves back to the Ksatriya, and give the western region of Multan and upper Sindh as the cradle of their caste. It has been conjectured from the customs and internal structure of the Khatri and Arora, which differ in some respects from those of the ordinary Brahmanic castes, that these communities are descended from one of the S'aka colonies which long held the tracts above mentit>ned. The Banya, with the exception of the Agarval, who come from Agar near Ujjain, give the now ruined city of Bhinmal, or S'rimal, in Marvad as their original home, and claim descent from the Solanki clan of the Agnikula or Huna Rajputs, so that, like the Khatri, they are of foreign race. Whether owing to this origin or to the refining influence of gene- rations of sedentary pursuits in prosperous circumstances, the personal appearance of the Banya is decidedly above the average. The western subdivisions, such as the S'rimall, Porval and Osval, which are all closely connected with each other, are largely, and in many tracts, mostly, of the Jain religion, a creed which seems to have commended itself to the mer- cantile community at a comparatively early period ; and they allege the acceptance of the peaceful tenets of this faith to have been one of the main reasons for their separation from the bellicose Rajput. In the present day, except in Delhi, where a special casus belli arose some years ago, the Mahesrl, or Brahmanic section of the caste intermarries with the S'ravak, or Jain, and the latter, in turn, employ for their caste and domestic mi- InJo-Aryan Research. 11. 5. 3 34 5- Ethnography. nistratiuns, the Bhojak, or Scvak, a subdivision of Brahmans not in high repute among the priestly orders, representing, as they are said to do, the Maga sun-priests introduced from Iran l)y the Huna and other invaders. In addition to the main divisions of the Banya, almost every body is sub- divided into "full-scores" (visa) and "half-scores" (dasa), denoting the relative admixture of lower blood. In many castes the partition has to be carried still further, and the "quarter-score" (pafica) represents the minimum of pure descent. None of the subdivisions intermarry, though in the west there is occasional connubium found between the "visa", or highest sections of the respective castes. The Banya engage in most mercantile pursuits, from high finance and extensive fureign trade down to the retail of the most common articles of everyday use, so long as these are not conventionally polluting. They are not as wedded to their native place as most of the Indian communities, and settle, sometimes permanently, in villages where they are strangers both in caste and language. Others, jirincipally from the desert States, habitually leave home for the more favoured parts of t,hc country, and return only after their fortune is made there. The upper classes of the Banya are well educated and often keen sectarians in regard to religion. In some tracts they are entering the law and the State offices, though not in large numbers. The Khatrl of the Panjab, on the other hand, in addition to the trade of all but the south-west of his province, has almost the monopoly of official and professional employment, and has passed even beyond the Panjab into parts of the neighbouring jjrovince in similar callings. This caste has what the Banya lacks, the tradition of administrative and political success, in which it resembles the Maratha Brahman mentioned al)ove. Todar Mai, the celebrated financier under Akbar, was a Khatri, and has had more than one successor, though not of the same calibre. Then, too, though the bulk of the Khatri are not of the Sikh faith, they have always been connected with it, and both Nanak and Govind belonged to their ranks. In the present day, such priests as are required by the Sikhs are usually Khatri. In trade, though sharp and industrious, the Khatri does not take so high a position as the Banya, but confines his operations generally to small local transactions, and does not, as a rule, set up branch establish- ments outside his native province. There are, however, a few colonies in Bengal, but they are detached, and their position is considerably below that occupied by the caste in its northern home. In some other parts of India there are Khatri returned who trace their origin back to the Panjab or north Rajputana, and were probably driven southwards by one of the Scythic cataclysms, and like others similarly circumstanced, found them- selves obliged to take to new means of livelihood, generally silk-weaving. Closely allied to the Khatri, but occupying a decidedly inferior social position, are the Arora of the south-western Panjab, who, starting from nearly the same region as the others, do not appear to have pushed their way into the fertile tracts of the north, but to have remained on the less remunerative plains along the Indus. In the same direction are the Bhatid and Lohana of Sindh. The former have preserved in their title the me- mory of their origin in the Bhatti districts of north Rajputana, and claim descent from the predominant Rajput stock of that locality, just as the Banya of Bhmmal does in the west. There is this further similarity, that the Yadava race of the Bhatti looks back to a S'aka founder, in the grandson of Kaniska. There are still a good many Bhatia in the Panjab, where their Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 35 Rajput blood seems unquestioned, but, unlike the Khatri, their position seems to improve the further they get from their native country, and it is along the coast that they are most flourishing, and in upper Sindh most depressed. They have so arranged their caste-rules that they are able to cross the ocean without subsequent trouble, and are among the most travelled and enterprising merchants of Kach, Bombay, Zanzibar and even China. The Lohana, again, are of Marvad origin, but moved into Sindh very early in their history, and have there remained. From a centre at Shikarpur, they travel far into Central Asia and even to the banks of the Volga. One of their subdivisions (the Amil) has followed the example of the Khatri, and taken to clerical professions. Like its prototype, also, it has succeeded in monopolising the pick of official employment in its native province. The figures given against the several subdivisions of the general heading of Banya are much below the reality, owing to the omission in many, if not most, cases to enter the subcaste, and to the substitution of some such indefinite designation as Marvadi, S'ravak, Vais, and so on. This is markedly the case in Bengal, where, with the exception of the subdivisions dealing with specific products, which find place in a later paragraph, nearly the whole trading community appears as a single item. The Subarn abanik, it is true, has distinguished itself from its neighbours, probably because it claims a rank above that accorded it by public opinion. It is an immigrant body from upper India, and as a considerable number of its members are still engaged as assayers and money changers and it employs Brahmans recruited from its own ranks, it seems possible that it is an offshoot of the Sonar caste which elsewhere in India makes similar claims and is not unfrequently returned as a Daivajna or VLsvakarman Brahman, an assumption not yet accepted beyond its own members. Other artisan castes in the South make the same claim, but as the Subarnabanik is prosperous and fairly well educated, it will not improbably end, if not where it desires, at all events considerably above its present rank. In the Dravidian country, the trading castes differ from those above described in being almost entirely indigenous to the locality they serve. The move- ments which are reported to have taken place have been to comparatively short distances, such as those from the uplands of the Telugu country to the rich and thickly-peopled tracts of the south-east. There is this further difference between these castes and the traders of the north, that in most cases the former are intimately connected with, and probably sprang from, one or other of the great agricultural communities amongst whom they live, and from whom they are still distinguished by little else than function. One result of this relationship, and not an unhealthy one, has been observed viz, that where the business of lending money is carried on by |)eople of the same class as the borrower, the dealings arc on a less formal and more elastic footing than where, as in other parts of the country, the usurer has simply come to the village from a strange country to make his fortune out of the necessities of the natives. Considering that what with weddings and other ceremonies, every peasant is at some time or other a borrower, the above feature is not unimportant from a political as well as from an economical point of view. There is the usual tendency among those who prosper to adopt the ceremonial and customs of the local Brahmans or to grow more scrupulous in their observance, and, amongst the Telugu traders, to assert in due course a Vaisya origin, a 36 5- Ethnography. pretension which their form of caste-subdivision and their more intimate domestic practices flagrantly contradict. The Komati, for instance, wear the sacred thread and arc divided into three territorial endogamous sub- divisions, lullowing the modern Brahmanic, not the Vedic, ritual. Their exogamous groups, however, of which there are a great number, are not Brahmanic but totemistic, derived from trees, plants or articles of food, the use of which is prohibited respectively to the group to which it belongs. Their marriage rules are those peculiar to the South and the ceremony is incomplete without the formal presentation of the friendly and symbolic betel -nut and leaf to a member of the impure leather-working caste, with whom the traders share "a commim tutelary deity. It is a good example of the growing refinement of modern times, that in order to mitigate the crudity of the above-mentioned act of social intimacy without breaking away from a possibly prophylactic tradition, it is now the habit for the bride's father to send a pair of shoes to be mended a few days before the wedding, and on the day of the ceremony to pay the cobbler with a betel-nut thrown in to the amount of the bill. The largest trading community of the Telugu country is the Balija, which is widely sjiread over the Tamil di.stricts also, and there called Vadugan, or Northerners, or Kavarai, from the caste goddess. They have a great number of subdivisions, which are not, however, endogamous, as a rule, possibly owing to the practice of receiving into the caste refugees from outside who are in disgrace with their own kinsfolk. One division of the Balija, however, keeps itself apart, being descended from the Nayak Chiefs of Madura. Though it wears no sacred thread, it claims to be Ksatriya. As a whole, the Balija arc probably an outgrowth of the great agricultural body of the Kajiu or Reddi. Like the Komati, they are in curiously close relations with the impure leather-workers and village menials of the lo- cality. It might be inferred from this fact that the latter belong to a race preceding the present occupants of the soil, and like the Dasyu of the north, dispossessed of their heritage, but acknowledged to be influential with the gods of the village. The Banjiga is the Karnatic trader, and has no connection with his namesake the Banya. Generally speaking, the Banjiga, though much subdivided, is of the same stock as the Kanarese peasantry, whose ])roclivities towards the Lingayat faith it largely shares. In the Tamil country the trader is usually a Cetti a title which is nearly as comprehensive as that of Banya. It covers several large and a vast number of small subdivisions. In most cases the marriage rules resemble in imi)ortant particulars those of the surrounding peasantry of the better class. They worship the local goddesses and call in a carpenter by caste to bestow his blessing upon the bride and bridegroom, thus generally testifying to their local origin. Their main subdivision, the Nattukottai, shares the reputation of the Bhatia for unwonted enterprise and success in foreign trade and travel. § 29. The last group to be mentioned under this head is that ol the Muslim traders. These belong to the west coast, with the exception of the Labbai, who, though settled along the south-east, are nevertheless connected with those of Malabar by origin. The rest consist mainly of converts of long-standing from the Lohana and other traders of Sindh and Kach. I'nfortunatcly, the full strength of these bodies is not ascer- tainable from the Census returns owing to the appropriation of the same title by different communities. The Khojah, for instance, of the coast, are Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 37 a wealthy body of enterprising traders converted to the Shiah form of Islam about the 13 th century. They moved southwards from Sindh into Gujarat and Bombay, and there, starting from petty shopkceping, they have attained a very high position in foreign trade, and arc noted for the number of the branches they have set up abroad. The Khojah of the Panjab are quite distinct from these, though they too are converts from the Brahmanic mercantile classes and mostly profess the Shiah tenets. They also, like the others, recognise as their religious head H. H. Agha Khan, whose family migrated to Bombay from Persia about sixty years ago. The IMcman, again, arc of Sindh origin, descended from a body of Lohana who were converted in the 15 th century, and, like the rest, moved into Kach and Kathiavad. In common with the western Khojah, they have preserved a good deal of their Brahmanic custom and tradition. In commerce they have risen to a good position, though not, perhaps, to the rank of the Khojah. Their counterpart is found in the Momin or Momna, a body of Gujarat peasants converted about the same time as the Meman, and who are now chiefly weavers and cotton-goods dealers, with a few still on the land. About half of those returned as Mc-man at the Census probably belong to the latter community, and about two thirds of the Khojah are of the Panjab section. The last of the Muslim trading classes of the Bombay coast to be here mentioned is the Bohra, in its various subdivisions. These, like the rest, are converts to the Shiah faith from the commercial classes of the chief towns in Gujarat, about the 1 1 th century, and combine the strict observance of Muslim worship with a due regard for the Brahmanic or pre-Brahmanic methods of dealing with the personal or domestic supernatural. The ujiper classes engage in foreign trade, but the rank and file are content with a successful career in the retail shop, and are somewhat remarkable for their neglect of English in an otherwise efficient and well-diffused scheme of instruction. The Census shows under the same title the cultivating Vohora of Gujarat, Sunni by sect, and retaining in most cases a fairly clear recollection of the Brahmanic caste from which they were converted, and adjusting their marriage arrangements in accordance therewith. About half the number of Bohras given in the return belong to this class. On the Malabar coast are the Majjpila and Jonakkan, and on the south Coromandel coast, the Labbai. The last named are descended from an Arab colony, driven from its native country in the 8th century; or, according to another account, from Arab traders who married Tamil wives at a later date. Their con- nection with Arabia is indicated, in either case, by the name of S'onagan (Arabia) which they used to bear, and their present name of Labbai is said to be no more than a local rendering of labbaik, the Arabic for the familiar phrase "here I am". In practice they are orthodo.x Muslim, though like the Muslim of the eastern Panjab, they marry by Brahmanic rites with a text or two of the Kuran recited to complete the ceremony. There is a small community living side by side with them, known as the Marakkayar, who claim similar origin, but do not intermarry, and are apparently of more recent arrival. Both speak Tamil with a few Arabic words interspersed. Those who are not traders are engaged in betel cul- tivation and pearl-diving. The Mappila have been referred to in other parts of this survey as the chief Arabian colony on the western coast. They are placed in this group because it was as traders that they first visited Malabar, but in the present day this pursuit is practised only along 38 5- Ethnography. the coast, and the bulk of the Mapi)ila inland arc landholders and culti- vators. In both capacities they have shown themselves thrifty and energetic. Their name is cither an honorific soubriquet, shared by some other classes in the neighbourhood, or, as some think, the Tamil word for bridegroom, applied to the Arabs who married native women. In language and in many of the local customs of marriage and inheritance, they have identified themselves with the native population. The Jonakkan are no other than Mnppila returned under a title given along the coast, especially in Tra- vancorc, to converts to Islam, and is possibly the Malayalam rendering of Yavana, the old Rrahmanic designation for all foreigners hailing from the west. The community is recruited from some of the castes along the coast, especially the fishermen, of whom the Mukkuvan have in some families the curious rule that one of their children should embrace Islam. In remarkable contrast to the experience in the Panjab in regard to such conversion, it is alleged that the Malayalam is improved by the change in faith. Probably the original status of the convert was lower than in the north. ij 30. Writer castes (2,750,300): The profession of scribe or clerk was in all probability unusually late in establishing itself in India owing to the jealousy with which all instruction was monopolised by the Brahmans, as well as to the extraordinary development of memory and oral tradi- tion fostered by them. Setting aside the art of inscribing rock and copper, writing as a profession appears in inscriptions of the Sth century A. D., and a few generations later, the caste of the Writer is referred to under the same name as it bears in the present day. It may be gathered from the data available that the calling was in anything but good odour amongst the Brahmans and that the castes exercising it occupied but a low position. Their chance came when the Muslim conquerors, having established them- selves permanently in the country, felt the need of clerical ability to help them through the labours of administration, and were unwilling, on sectarian grounds, to have recourse to the Brahman. In the writing castes the very material they wanted was at hand. The Khatri, as mentioned in a former paragraph, furnished several most efficient ministers to the Moghal regime ; the principal supply, however, was, as it still is, from the Kayasth caste, which, from the upper Ganges, was introduced into Gujarat by the Muslim Viceroys and naturalised there. A similar colonisation was begun by the same agency in the Dekkan, but the local Brahman was there too numerous and too well-established throughout the country to leave room for a rival, and the offshoot from the main Kayasth branch, under the name of Prabhu, forsook the tableland for the coast, and settled in Bombay and its vicinity. Here they were found so useful by the early British merchants and officials that until a generation or so ago, Prabhu and clerk were synonymous terms in those parts. In the present day the main stron^j^hold of the Kayasth is in Lower Bengal, into which they were introduced from U])per India. Distance, however, as usual in India, has entirely divided the two communities, and there is no intermarriage between the Kayasth of Bengal and his caste-fellows of Bihar and the north any more than with those of the west coast. Even the local bodies of this caste are much subdivided into smaller endogamous sections, generally territorial. The position of the Kayasth and other writer castes in the social hierarchy has long been a matter of heated controversy. In what may be called the primary distribution of rank according to function no Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 39 place could be assigned to a body which was not then recognised as distinct from others. Literary qualifications which may well set off a Brahman, are, by themselves, of little value as a passport to the esteem of a public deliberately illiterate. Distinguished members of the writing class, such as those mentioned above, were duly honoured as individuals, but did not ennoble the community in which they were born. The dis- proi)ortion between the ability of the writer castes and the value of their work on the one side, and the company they were classed with in private life on the other, grew more apparent as, under the British system of administration, their prosperity and influence increased. It is no wonder, therefore, that efforts have been strenuous and freciuent on their part to establish themselves upon a social footing higher than that now recognised by the arbiters in such matters. The line taken as that of least resistance is the usual claim to Ksatriya lineage. There is not, however, in their case, the probability of racial difference between them and the Indian masses of the north and east which is lent, in the case of the Khatri and their offshoots, by tradition, physique and locality of origin. In the parts of the country, therefore, where Rajputs arc found in strength and Brahmanic influence is strong, the Kayasth is a respected caste high up in the middle classes, but nothing more. In Lower Bengal, however, where the Rajput is a casual exotic and the weight of Brahman opinion is insufficient to appease the jealous ferment of an inchoate social system, the Kayasth ranks within a place or two of the Brahman, and practically, though not avowedly, above the warrior. In Gujarat, where the clerical i)rofessions are by no means the monopoly of the writing castes, there is, in addition to the small colony of Kayasth, a still less numerous community called the Brahmaksatriya, whose appearance and customs confirm their assertion of relationship to the Khatri of the Panjab. Their immigration, indeed, occurred as late as the 14th century. They are not only writers, but also holders of considerable landed estates in the most prosperous parts of the province, and their position is in many respects higher than that of their compeers in the north. Another nominal offshoot of the writers of the north is the Karan or Mahant of Orissa. This community is considerably subdivided into endogamous bodies, the more southern of which retain traces of non-Brahmanic marriage rules. It is very probable, therefore, that tht)se nearer Bengal affiliate themselves to the Kayasth of that province, whilst the rest remain in closer communion with the corresponding groups of the Telugu country. These last, with their Tamil congeners, stand on a different footing from the writer castes of the north. The upper grades amongst them, it is true, are strict in their observance of Brahmanic ceremonial, and wear, occasionally at least, the sacred thread. But, like the Dravidian traders, they appear to have arisen out of the cultivating castes, and began with being, what most are still, the accountants of the village, a branch of clerical work which, when not kept in the hands of Brahmans, is relegated to the lower grade of writers or even, as in Bihar, to another caste, and connotes an inferior social rank to that of the rest of the order. Intermediate between the Brahman and the Karnam comes the Vidhur, of the Maratha country, a small caste which supplements the clerical staff of the Central Provinces and Berar. By origin the Vidhur is Brahman on the father's side, but maternally of a lower caste. Similarly constituted communities are found in the Konkan and other parts of the Maratha 40 5- ETHNOGRAPm'. country. Finally, a place is found under this head for a caste difficult to grade elsewhere, though, according to its title of Vaidya, it ought to be dedicated to the practice of medicine. Nowadays, however, it includes both members of other learned professions and landholders. It is only found in Lower Bengal, where it occuiiies, thanks to the Icjcal obnubilation of the Rajput, a position inferior only to that of the Brahman. This high rank is due to the fact that one of the most powerful dynasties in this part of India between the nth and 13th centuries, belonged to this caste; and the most renowned occupant of the throne, Ballal Sen, api)ears to have e.xercised with drastic results the regal function of making and graduating castes, a function which in the present time is retained in working order by the Chieftains of the Panjab Himalaya alone. § 31. Religious Devotees and Mendicants (-,755,900): The abdica- tion of worldly position and the relinquishment of all possessions and family ties, in order to jjursuc an undisturbed course of contemplation preparatory to quitting the present existence, is a iiroceeding which has been strongly attractive to the higher ranks of the Brahmanic community almost from the ])ost-Vedic organisation of society upon sacerdotal lines. Indeed, according to the strict theory of duty set forth in the treatises dealing with the Perfect Life, it is incumbent upon every Brahman thus to break with his former ties as he feels old age creeping over him. Although this injunction is substantially inoperative, there are other con- siderations which tend to swell the ranks of religious devotees in modern India. Looking only at the lower side of the case, the vast number of popular saints and deities, some universal, others w^ith only local renown, is in itself an inducement to many to earn their living by invoking a Blessing in the name of one or other of these objects of veneration upon the households within the area of adoration, receiving in return a handful of meal and a pinch or two of condiments. Life is easily sustained in the tropics upon this frugal diet, whilst the climate affords opportunities for a pleasant nomadic existence, which, if extended as it often is, to the visitation of the chief centres of pilgrimage, brings these classes into con- tact with their co-religionists from all parts of the country. It is no matter for surprise, therefore, that about one in a hundred of the population has thus taken to the road, leaving little room, accordingly, for the lay mendi- cant, outside the ranks of the maimed, the halt, the blind and the leper. But whilst the lower grades of the profession are laxly recruited and the members thereof take their calling very lightly, there is in all the principal orders a body formally initiated and put through a course of instruction in certain tenets of doctrine and morality which they are in turn sent forth to inculcate upon the community at large. Most of the great orders originated in the South of India. Some are said to have been instituted by the celebrated S'aiva reformer, S'ankaracarya. but most at- tribute their creation to his successor, Ramanuja. On reaching upper India, however, their constitution and practice were altered by Ramananda and Caitanya, who mitigated to a considerable extent the exclusiveness of their recruitment and the austerity of their regulations. The object which these bodies were originally formed to promote was the extirpation of Buddhism, a task begun by the great leaders of the Brahmanical revival. Confined at first to the Brahman and Ksatriya, or Raji)ut, the orders began, in due course, to open their ranks to members of other castes, and then split up into two sectious, the celibate, or ascetic, and the do- Castes and Caste-Groups. A. Special Groups. 41 mestic. The orders which admitted the lower castes too, were soon sub- divided into the exclusive and the catholic branches, as in the case of the Vaisnava of Bengal, jiart of whom came under the levelling influence of Caitanya. The branch which takes to family life forms sei)arate endo- gamous communities, and judging from the number of women returned under the various titles, excluding certain castes which bear a name also borne by non-ascetic bodies, such subdivisions appear to be in the ma- jority, for there are in the aggregate 90 women to every lOO men. In Bengal, indeed, the former are in excess, as they are in the population at large in that province. In upper India, however, there are many large establishments of the nature of monasteries which supply the bulk of the higher grades of itinerant teachers. Even in these, however, the functions of the fraternity are not restricted to religion, for some of the Wahantas, or Abbots, as they have been called, have been noted money-lenders on the strength of the funds and endowments of their charge. In former days, too, bodies of these devotees used to be formed into irregular forces, which exhibited in action the same fanatical ferocity as is now associated with the Muslim Ghazi and in the middle of last century with the Sikh Akali. A remnant of one of these bands still survives, it is said, in the Dadupanthi Naga of the State of Jaipur in Rajputana, a country associated to some extent with the expansion of the ascetic movement. It is not pro- posed to enter here into the doctrinal differences between the various fraternities further than to mention that there is the usual main division of the principal bodies into S'aiva and Vaisnava, with many subdivisions, the latter school being the more modern. Nor, again, is it necessary' to set forth in detail the sections of the orders, since being recruited from all classes of the population, regardless of caste or race, they are of no ethnographic importance, and under each head are included members of the Sikh, Jain and Muslim creeds along with those of orthodox Brahmanism. It is impossible, indeed, to state accurately the numbers falling under each head, owing to the loose way in which the principal designations are applied. Under the title of Fakir, for instance, which is specially ap- plicable to Muslim devotees, nearly 450,000 Brahmanists and Sikhs are returned. The Atit, again, a general title, are given as identical with Gosavl or Sannyasi as well as under their own heading. Vairagi or BairagI covers not only the Vaisnava and some of the Dandasi, but also most of those returning themselves as Bhava or Sadhu, terms used of Brahmanic devotees in general. Still more misleading is the return under Jogi, an order differing from the rest in its origin, and conjecturally not called into existence to combat schism, but itself a heretical order, proscribed by the orthodox, probably on account of its then Jain or Buddhist proclivities. It is shown in combination with the Jugi, a class of coarse-cotton weavers in eastern Bengal and Assam, reputed to have come from the south-west, but undoubtedly taking its rise from some religious organisation of the lower classes, and now said to be "assuming the sacred thread en masse", and contesting its right to wear it against the local Brahmanity. In upper India, the Jogi or Yogi community is divided into those who have a right to the title by profession and initiation and others who have assumed it for the convenience of their calling. The former, of whom there are two main subdivisions, have their monasteries and settled organisation, the latter who are returned in the Panjab, Rajputana and Gujarat under the name also of Raval, trade upon the reputation the other Jogi have acquired 42 5- Ethnography. for obtaining supernatural powers of divination by dint of contemplation and mental abstraction; consequently, "any rascally beggar who pretends to be able to tell fortunes or to practice astrological or necromantic arts in however small a degree, buys a drum and calls himself a Jogi". The 43,000 Muslim returned as Jogi in the Panjab and its neighbourhood arc thus accounted for. C(jnsidering the Dravidian origin of most f>f the ascetic orders and the traces of the South still preserved in their customs and nomenclature, it is remarkable that hardly any are now found in that part of India, and those chiefly of the lower class. Even the mendicants who there ply their trade in the name of religion hold no reputable position in the community. This is perhaps attributable to the fact that though the genesis of the great orders took place in the south, it was in the north that the need of their propagandist efforts was most pressing. B. The village community. § 32. In the greater part of India, the village as a unit not only of population but of land, has assumed a form not to be found in other countries. In European Russia, it is true, the system of rural aggregation bears a considerable resemblance to that of India, but has far less weight in the social organisation, and is far less bound up with the ethnic evo- lution of the country. The village, then, as it falls within the scope of this review, is an agricultural community on a self-sufficing basis, congregated, for the original purpose of protection, on to a single site, surrounded by a definite area of land the prescriptive right to which is invested in it. Originally, no doubt, the occupants of the soil formed a close corporation based upon kinship or common descent, but in the course of time that exclusiveness crumbled away, and new comers were admitted to the land, though on an inferior footing, in most cases, to the rest. The village exists for the agriculturist, and the exercise of other callings therein depends upon their necessity or utility to him, and this, in turn, depends upon the relative isolation of the village from other sources of supply. The staple staff of artisans and menials is remunerated directly from the soil in re- cognised proportions of the harvest, so much threshed grain from each landholder. The completeness of the organisation varies considerably in different parts of the country, but where it exists, its main features are much the same. The village, in the above sense, is not found in the comparatively recent settlements east of Bihar, or on the Malabar coast; nor has it taken root amongst the more or less migratory tribes of forest tracts, where the insufficiency of arable land and the frequent flittings of the population from spirit-haunted or unlucky locations are adverse to so stationary an institution. Although, then, these tribes live mostly by rough methods of tillage, they cannot be counted amongst the landed classes, and arc therefore dealt with apart from those to whom that designation is conventionally more appropriate. The latter can best be considered under two heads, first, the castes which hold their land as a military or formerly dominant body, and, then, the peasantry dwelling alongside of them without traditions of a status or calling other than that which they now enjoy. § 33. Landholders, Military or Dominant (23,702,400): Castes of this type may be e.^cpected to be more powerful and more prominently demarcated from the rest in the track of the great racial inroads from Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 43 the north-west. Eastwards of the settlements of the Pathan and Baluch tribes, which will be treated of in a later paragraph, a line drawn from the Gujarat peninsulas, through Malva, to the Ganges, marks off the domain of the Rajput, Jat and kindred tribes, whilst the Salt range of the Panjab, and the sub-Himalayan tracts from the Jehlam to Nepal form their general limit on the north. East of Bihar, the Koch, or Rajbansi, and the .AhOm may be said to occupy a somewhat similar position amongst the Mongo- loidic population. In the Dekkan, the Maratha may be included on histo- rical grounds in this category, though his origin is doubtful and the limits of his caste wanting in definition. In Southern India the title of dominant is applicable to several Dravidian communities which rose into prominence with the dynasties of which they constituted the chief military forces, and on disbandment, either reverted to or assumed, the position of cultivators. There is no question here, therefore, of foreign origin. On the Malabar coast, on the other hand, the Nayar, though now thoroughly Dravidianised, is said to have come from the north. In Orissa, again, the Khandait makes the same claim, but is probably of much the same origin as the other Dravidian communities of this class. Reverting to the castes of ujiper India, the Rajput has been dealt with in a former paragraph sufficiently for the purposes of this review. An important point in connection with the subject immediately in hand is the close connection between the Rajput and the Jat, who ranks next to him both in numbers and position throughout the Panjab jilains, Raj- putana, and the upper Ganges and Jamna valleys. It has been conjectured by some that the difference between the two communities is social, not racial, the Rajput being a Jat leader who, after being successful in the field or on his estate, bound himself and his family to the strict obser- vance of Brahmanic rules and thus attained the pinnacle of orthodo.x repute, whilst the rest of his tribe remained Jat in name and in their traditions and practice. In the circumstances of the two castes in the Panjab in the present day there is much to support this view. Others hold that the Jat belongs to a later wave of immigration than the Rajput, and entered the Panjab from the west, by way of Sindh and the Indus, whilst the Rajputs were still in Rajputana and its eastern neighbourhood. However this may be, the northern stock has now been fused, and though the Jat no longer becomes a Rajput, the same tribe is found Rajput in one village and Jat in the next. In the Jamna tracts this is not the case. Whether because the Jat arrived there direct from Sindh and remained at a distance from the seat of the predominant body of his tribe, or whether by reason of admixture with inferior Rajput blood, his physique and social position are lower. The Jat par excellence is the peasantry of the Sikh tracts, where the tradition of political supremacy is still green, and the Jat has nothing to gain in public estimation from either Brahman, Rajput or Pathan. Along the Jamna, he has succumbed to the prevailing influences, and looks up to the Rajput, whilst in the west, he does the same to the leaders of Muslim society, and his name has been there bestowed upon any cultivator of that religion, whatever his caste. Like the Rajput and other great com- munities in the north-west, the Jat places religious considerations beneath tribal in his domestic arrangements, so it appears from the Census that one third of the population bearing this name are Muslim, one fifth Sikh, and just under half, Brahmanist. As stated above, the Jat is in the first place a cultivator, and the women of his family share to the full his 44 5- Ethnography. enthusiasm in the pursuit of the family calling. The Sikh Jat is also a born soldier, not merely a combatant, but a disciplinarian, and equally efficient on the snow-clad ridges of Afghanistan and the steamy plains of Tientsin. Next to the Jat in rank, and probably akin in origin, comes the Gujar, a caste as to whose descent there has been much controversy between the pro-Aryan and the [iro-Scythian. The caste is now generally affiliated to the Gurjara, a tribe which was settled in the neighbourhood of the Caspian, and entered India either in company with or at the same time as, the Yetha or White Huna, of whom they arc said to have been a branch. They spread very widely over the west and north-west, and one body of Gurjara obtained a dominant footing in the'western province which is now called after them. Their connection with it, however, after the downfall of their dynasties, was dissipated into innumerable channels of castes, where it is recognisable only in customs and in the titles of some of the sub-castes. The greater jiortion of the Gujar settled in the Panjab and along the Jamna, with a considerable colony in Oudh. In the first named tract, again, they have left their name behind them in several places, but it is only in the submontane portion that they can now be called a dominant tribe. In the plains they follow their traditional occu- pation of cattle-breeding, combined, it may be, with cultivation, in which they are not so expert. Their unrestrained devotion to the horned beast is such that in some parts of India their title is derived from the Sans- kritic term for Cowthief. Even though philology may not support this deri- vation, it has the authority of their almost universal reputation. They are not now found south of the Vindhya, where those returned as Gujar are traders from Gujarat, who, as stated above, retain traditions of a cognate origin. It is held, indeed, that a Gurjara element underlies all the chief cultivating classes of Gujarat above those traceable to a distinctly K61 origin. Returning to the Panjab, the south of the Salt range tract is the present home of the Avan, who have been there for at least 6oo years. They are said to have come up from Marvad or upper Sindh, and to have belonged to one of the numerous Scythic bands which gave the Jat and other castes to the country further east. Though the Avan are nearly all Muslim, they retain Brahmanic names in their genealogies, and use Brahmans as their family priests. They have not spread beyond the north-west corner of the Panjab, where they share with the Janjhua Rajput and the Khokhar the predominant position among the peasantry. The Khokhar, however, though equally of the faith of Islam, have maintained more fully the tradition of Rajput origin, and return themselves in considerable numbers as a clan of that great caste. Others, again, claim to be Jat. The Gakkhar in the north of the Salt Range plateau are similarly situated to the Avan in the south. There seems to be little doubt but that the three tribes are all of allied Scythic origin, and became Rajput during the Brahmanic revival, Jat when the Sikhs rose to power, and claimants to Mughal blood now that the influence of Islam reigns supreme in this region. Among the tribes behmging traditionally to this part of India may be counted the Kathi, though in the present day they are found under this title only in the western peninsula to which they have given their name, and even there in but small numbers. In the Panjab they consider themselves a subclan of the Panvar Rajput, and are thus merged in the general mass of that order. In Kathiawad they preserve the tradition of migration from BFkaner and Multan, the latter being the very tract in which they were Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 45 found by Alexander as a foreign nomadic body, successfully resisting the expeditions sent against them by neighbouring Aryan potentates. It is conjectured, therefore, that these, too, are Scythic tribes connected with the rulers of Taxila at that period, and were driven into exile through Sindh into Kach by the Muslim invasions. They are now principally cultivators, but keep green the remembrance of their original occupation of cowherds by breeding horses and cattle. They also retain their ancestral sun-worship, and a rude representation of that luminary is affixed to all their formal documents. It is not improbable that they are of the same stock as the Ahir or Abhlra, the great cattle-breeders of upper India, though their position is now higher than that of the latter. In Sindh, two Rajput tribes of agriculturists, the Sumro and the Sammo, successively occupied the dominant position on the lower Indus from about 750 A. D. to the middle of the i6th century, and now belong to Islam. Their respective numbers are by no means accurately represented in the Census return owing to the wide-spread practice in this province of giving the general title of Sindhi as the name 01 the tribe or caste, thus placing nearly a quarter of a million of the inhabitants beyond the possibility of identification. East of the Panjab, the only caste, beside those already mentioned, which can be described as dominant, is the Taga, a community of the upper Jamna. Its origin is doubtful; though it seems to be generally agreed that it has Brahman blood; but the prominence of snake-worship amongst Taga, together with the division of the caste into the "Score" and Half- Score" sections, indicates considerable admixture of local races. Their degradation from Brahmanical rank is attributed to their addiction to agriculture, as in the case of the Babhan of the south-east. More than a third of them are now Muslim. In Bihar, the only dominant caste beyond the Rajput is the Babhan or Bhumhar, already mentioned in connection with Brahmans, which forms but a small proportion of the population. Lower Bengal as above stated, was never colonised by military occupation, and the only caste which may be called dominant is the Koch of the northern territory bordering upon the Brahmaputra. Their claim to this position rests upon the long existence of the Koch kingdom of Kamarupa, in the Assam valley, and its extension, for a time, into Bengal. The latter portion was separated from the rest towards the end of the i6th century, and succumbed to the Muslim, as did the other shortly afterwards to the Ahom. There are two distinct sections of the population owning to the name of Koch. West and south of the Brahmaputra it is said to be of Kol-Kher- vari origin, and has long been Brahmanised under the designation of Rajbansi, which satisfies the aspiration of the local peasantry, as that of Rajput crowns the ambition of the Chieftain or large landowner in other parts of India. In Assam, on the contrary, where the lineage of the local leading families is known, the Koch is IMongoloidic, or Bodo in origin, and its rank and file are recruited from all the Bodo and iSIikir tribes of the valley, who drop their own title on adopting Brahmanism. Some go further, and pass at once into Rajbansi, or embrace Islam if their claim be not allowed. The respective numbers of the two are, 2,115,700 Rajbansi, chiefly in Bengal, and 292,100 Koch, of the Assam branch. The Ahom of the more eastern portion of the Assam valley, are also a once dominant tribe of agriculturists of Indo-Chinese descent, who will be referred to under the head of Assam Hill tribes. There is one more caste belonging to Bengal which may be here mentioned, to wit the Khandait of Orissa. 46 5- Ethnography. They seem to have been originally a body of local militia enlisted from the Bhuiya, a Kol tribe, and commanded, probably, by officers imported from upper India. Some of the customs of the latter commended themselves to their subordinates, on the strength of which form of flattery, a claim to the caste of Rajput was subsequently advanced. The Khandait is divided into two sub-castes, one comprising the landholders, probably endowed with estates for military services ; the other the peasantry and village watchmen. The former hold a good position and rank next to and but little below the Rajputs, who, as elsewhere in Bengal, have not taken firm root in the soil. A community which once carried its arms not only into Orissa but up to the very walls of Calcutta, without leaving any enduring trace of its passage, is the Maratha, the principal landed class in the Dckkan, and the dominant power in Baroda, Gwalior, and practically in Indore and several other states. The origin of the Maratha is obscure. Elsewhere in this work it has been stated that recent anthropometrical observations have given rise to the conjecture that there is a Scythic element in the population of the Dekkan beyond that which can be attri- buted to the dynastic influence of the various Ksatrapa Chieftains who maintained their power there long after the dissolution of the Huna sovereignty in Central India. The Brahmans of upper India, too, have the belief that the Maratha arc of Persian descent, and that the Citpavan Brahmans of the Konkan were their sun-priests, introduced in the 7th century and formally adopted into the local hierarchy. However this may be, there was not imjirobably some distinction between the masses and the dominant classes based upon race, as in Rajputana; but it did not obtain prominence until the leading families were welded into a military body by the Bhonsla. S'ivaji donned the sacred cord and took the title of Ksatriya upon his enthronement, and within a generation, his successors made a claim to definite Rajput descent, and were apparently not rebuffed even by the highest of the Rajput Chieftains. The kinship, however, has not been practically acknowledged, possibly because the political atmosphere has changed since the beginning of the iSth century. In the present day there is no definite line drawn between the Maratha and the Kunbl, or cultivating peasantry-, though the leading clans of the former still enjoy special consideration. Recruitment admittedly takes place from below, and any KunbT who prospers above his neighbours, renounces widow- marriage, secludes the women of his family, marries his daughters at an early age and within a narrow circle, and puts on the sacred thread for special occasions, becomes in due course a Maratha in title, with hyper- gamous tendencies not always ignored by the older families. Both Maratha and Kunbl are distinguished by the totemistic, not Brahmanic, character of their exogamous subdivisions, and by their worship of the same local deities, so that, like the Jat, the upper classes may have assumed a distinct po.sition without imposing the impassable barrier which exists in the north between the Rajput and the rest. Amongst the Marathas as a whole the only barrier of that nature is geographical, a Dekkani not intermarrying with a family in the Konkan, in spite of the identity of language. The climate, which entails a difterence of cultivation and con- sequently of diet, has affected the physique, and the broad-acred grower of millet disowns the tiller of the petty rice-patch. § 34. The Dravidian country remains to be considered. In the greater part of this tract the military and dominant element in the landed classes Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 47 is insignificant. In the Karnatic, indeed, it is scarcely to be found, and in Telingana, too, the position of a special subdivision is often found to rest upon the military recruitment of a former dynasty. The Razu, who were settled in the extreme south of the Tclugu country by the Vijaya- nagar C'hiefs, for whom they fought, seem to have the best claim to the distinction in question. They are undoubtedly superior to their neighbours in physique, and are more scrupulous as to ceremonial. They wear the sacred thread, seclude their women and employ Brahmans as their family priests. It is not improbable, therefore, that they are the remnants of a body of mercenaries from further north, and really differ in race from the Dravidians with whom they are now permanently associated. The Velama of the north Coromandel coast are an offshoot of the great Kapu or Reddi caste and closely connected with other agricultural bodies of the neighbourhood. They have amongst them, however, several wealthy and influential Zamlndars, or landed proprietors, and having adopted Brah- manical regulations more strictly than the rest, are generally considered to hold a somewhat higher position. In the Tamil country, especially in the south, the line of demarcation between the military castes and the others is more easily traced than amongst the Telugu masses, but there seems to be this noteworthy difference between the two regions, that the immigrant peasantry of the south rank higher in the present day than the castes once dominant, so that, setting aside the Chieftains and Zamin- dars, there is the tendency for a landowner of the latter, as he advances in prosperity, to get merged in the ranks of the former. The popular version of this inclination runs: "The Kalian became a Maravan ; the Maravan became an Agamudaiyan, and the Agamudaiyan is now a Vellalan". The explanation seems to be that the formerly dominant classes obtained their position by predatory, rather than military, prowess under the weak governments of the past, and retained with their independence their original religion and customs. In the piping times of the j^ax Britannica, however, Brahmanic influence is permeating the masses, and as its cere- monial is the touchstone of respectability, the more aspiring remnants of the earlier civilisation affiliate themselves to a body already in full touch with the refinement aimed at, in preference to taking up the invidious position of innovator in the community of their birth. The principal tribe coming under this head is the Kalian, which happens to be the Tamil for thief It is probable that the original meaning was different, but no alter- native has been found, and the interpretation is unfortunately justified by the history and habits of the caste. It is conjectured that the Kalian are an offshoot of the great Kurumban, or cowherd race of the south, which spread downwards from the uplands of Mysore, and were ousted from the plains successively by the Cera and the Cola dynasties. Some of the tribe expelled in their turn, the peasantry introduced by the latter, and settled on their lands. The reputation thus acquired helped to keep the Kalian in independence, and enabled them to maintain to this day their old customs untainted by Brahmanism in their essential features. The acknowledged head of their tribe is the Raja of Pudukottai, called by them the Tondaman, in memory of their former colonisation of Tondamandalam or the Pallava country. The bulk of them are cultivators and labourers; but they still furnish a strong contingent of watchmen, a duty which serves them as the pretext for the levy of a prophylactic subsidy from the householders thus subjected to their protection. Their neighbours to the south, the 48 5- Ethnography. Maravan, arc amongst the earliest inhabitants of this tract, and at one time got possession of the whole of the Pandya or Madura domain. They furnished a strong body of militia, and for many generations lorded it over the rest of the population. There is some connection, at present un- ascertained, between them and the Kaljan. Like the latter they worship their own gods and demons, and employ for the purpose priests drawn from the lower castes, but for ceremonial other than that of the temple, they call in Brahmans. Their head is the Zamlndar of Ramnad, to whom the Tondaman and other local magnates do obeisance when they meet. The Agamudaiyan again, are closely connected with the Maravan, with whom they intermarry under rules which in the Brahmanic system would imply hypergamy in favour of the latter. Nevertheless, the Agamudaiyan is the only caste of the three which has been substantially Brahmanised, and in many ways it comes near the Vellalan in practices and beliefs. Crossing the Peninsula, a distinctly dominant class is found in the Nayar of the Malabar coast, a community of northern race, with uncertain traditions as to its original home or the route by which it reached its present secluded domicile. It has its own peculiar customs and institutions, which, as in the case of the Rajputs, have been assimilated by indigenous castes of lower rank, who thereby justify the arrogation to themselves of the title of their superiors. The community, therefore, no longer consists of military landowners, as formerly, but includes, under subdivisional names, not only artisans and traders, but even menial castes such as the barber and washerman, who have found it worth while to devote their services exclusively to the Nayar. It is probable, then, that not more than three fourths of those returned under the latter title are true Nayar, and that these belong to at most three subdivisions of the tribe. The customs of the Nayar are, as observed above, peculiar, and of high ethnological in- terest, but it is not within the scope of this review to enter into them. It may be remarked in passing, however, that in many of them may be found traces of polyandry. Inheritance is through the female. The exogamous unit is based on descent from a common female ancestor in that line. The endogamous limit is hypergamous for the female, and either within or below the subcaste for the male. The Nayar of the north and those of the south form separate communities, the division being evidently based upon the notion that pollution lies in the south, perhaps because that region is further from the caste-cradle. The distinction between the tAVO is so strictly enforced that though Nayar males may circulate freely over the whole country, no female of the northern section may cross the river which divides Kanara from Malabar, nor, again, that which intersects the latter district. This group is completed by the addition of the Kodagu, or dominant tribe of the little district of Coorg, not by reason of its numbers, but, like the Kathi, because it has had a history, and has managed to maintair. its ])osition and language in its native uplands against all comers. Since the tract has been opened up by European enterprise, for the growth of special products, there has been a considerable influx of labour from Mysore and the coast, and the Kodagu now constitutes but a fourth of the population; but that fraction is at the top. § 35. Peasants (36,251,100): In nearly every part of India this group is the largest, and, together with those of the landless labourer and the village menials, includes the bulk of the rural population. The exceptional tracts are Rajputana and the Panjab, in which, as pointed out in the Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 49 preceding paragraph, the military tribes have retained their grip on the land. In accordance with the general scheme of exposition, it is proposed to subdivide this group here into the cultivating castes, in the wider sense of the term, and those who devote their efforts to the growth of special products, such as the bitcl-vine, or to roots and vegetables and other market-garden produce. Of the latter some are conventionally im- pure, such as onions, turmeric and turnips, or necessitate the destruction of life or extensive and intimate dealings with manure, both rejiugnant to Brahmanical tradition, in consideration of which the castes thus engaged have been relegated to a lower social position than the field operator. In the Panjab castes of this class are numerous, and in the plains of that Province there are but two others, outside the ranks of the do- minant, which call for mention here. The Kambo, one of the most skilful cultivators of the province, is found along the .Satlaj and in the east, where he has crossed over the Jamna into Rohilkhand. The caste is of local or Kashmiri origin, though the INIuslim minority in it claim to be Mughal. It is probably connected with the great gardening caste of the Arain, but its position is higher. One of its sections has taken to trade and the clerical professions, in which, however, they are said to be more skilful than honest. The Meo, or Mcvati, is the dominant caste of a jjortion of eastern Rajputana and a small tract in the south Panjab. It is no doubt a branch of the forest tribe of the Mina, but having become Muslim and acquired land, it has set up for itself. Formerly it gave much trouble from its unruly habits, but since its larger settlements were broken up into detached villages it has sobered down. Islam sits very lightly upon the IMeo, and he observes the Brahmanic festivals impartially with those of his own creed, ignoring the fasts of both. He continues to worship his old village gods and to employ Brahmans as his priests, but in these respects he does not differ from the bulk of his fellow converts in the neighbourhood. In the sub-Himalayan parts of the Panjab and the outer ranges there are a few interesting agricultural tribes on the borderland never occupied by the Jat and the hill country of the Rajputs, never oc- cupied by the Muslim. Some of these, the Thakar, Rathi and Raut, are undoubtedly related to some of the Rajput clans on the one side, but are merged into the lower Hill tribes, on the other. It is open to question, for instance, whether the Thakar is a low Rajput or a high Rathi, and whether the latter is not a somewhat elevated Kanait. The Raut, who is located nearer the plains that the rest, occupies a lower rank, and though recognised as a connection of the Candel Rajput, is more often associated with the Kanait. The latter and the Ghirath are the chief cultivating classes of these hills. The Ghirath is found principally in the Kangra valley, and is noted for growing rice wherever the land is sufficiently depressed to allow of the collection of sufficient water for the purpose. The caste is so subdivided that the saying goes that there are 360 sorts of rice and the same number of Ghirath clans. They are inferior in physique and mode of life to the cultivators of the higher valleys, and though they may have a tinge of Rajput blood, imparted by refugees from the plains, they are mainly of the specific hill type which prevails from the Indus to Sikkim. The Kanait are a more distinctive community of this race, and whilst one of their two main subdivisions has become more Brahmanised than the other, and pretends to be the progeny of Rajputs by Hill women, there seems reason to think that they belong to a very early wave of IndoAryan Research. II. o. 4 50 5- Ethnography. northern immigration, possibly Aryan, but not of the Vedic branch, which has received an infusion of other northern blood since its settlement in the Himalaya. They are now the tenants and labourers of the Rajput landowners. Further to the east, however, their relatives, the Khasiya of Kumaun and Garhval, escaped Rajput overlordship, and themselves sub- dued a lower and more primitive tribe, probably the pom. Owing to the fact that their territory contains the two celebrated shrines of Kcdarnath and Badarinath, at the reputed sources of the Ganges, the Khasiya have long been thoroughly Brahmanised, though the transition from a lower to a higher grade is more easily achieved than in the plains, and is here the result of the acquisition of wealth, not| as in the Panjab Hills, of royal favour. The Khasiya do not figure separately in the returns, as they are all included under the general head of Rajput, but their number is not far short of half a million. The community which goes by a somewhat similar name in Nepal is distinct, and of admittedly mixed origin, Brahmanic and Mongiiloidic Himalayan. In the Gangetic Doab, Oudh and Bihar, the great peasant castes are more or less connected with each other by origin, but in so fertile a tract, well provided with large towns, the occupation of market gardening has diverted an unusually large number of subdivisions from field work. Of those who have clung to the elder branch of the profession, the Kurmi is the most widely sjjrcad, especially along the Ganges and to the south thereof. The title corresponds to that of Kunbi, used in the Dekkan and western India. The derivation is uncertain, and though the word is found in the form of Kutumbika in some early inscriptions, this is probably only the Sanskritiscd version of some older name, such as that of Kul, a Dravidian name for a cultivating landholder, in which sense it is still used, and not only in the Dravidian country. The Kurmi is by no means a homogeneous body, and is not only much subdivided in the tracts where it is ajiparently of one race, but is used on the borders of the Central Belt as a sort of occupational title for those of the Kol tribes who have been long settled as cultivators and have thereby thriven beyond their ancestors. Closely allied with the Kurmi by origin, though now entirely distinct, are the Koeri. They rank below the former, who will drink, but not eat or intermarry with them, possibly because the Kocri have succumbed to the lucrative attractions of special cultivation, such as that of tobacco, the poppy and even vegetables. The Kisan, again, belong to the same slock, but like the Koorl, have long been formed into a separate caste, and are even more exclusive in their intercourse with outsiders. There is another community of the same name, though sometimes called Nagcsia, who have been combined with these in the Census return. They inhabit parts of Chutia Nagpur and the Central Provinces, and are of the Kol race. The Lodha is a caste of inferior position and probably of earlier settle- ment than the KurmT, from whom it differs in both physique and habits. The Lodha are specially addicted to the cultivation of rice, and are found nearly all over the Upper Provinces and a little way into Bihar. But the section which inhabits BundOlkhand and its neighbourhood is probably nearer the original stock, assuming the latter to belong to the Central Belt, and takes a lower place in society accordingly. The cultivating classes of the Central Provinces are those of the Dekkan in the west, and of the south Ganges-valley in the north, with a large substratum of the more civilised forest tribes in most parts. In the Chatiisgarh districts, the Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 51 Kavar is probably an offshoot of the last named group, though the fertility of the country has enabled it materially to improve its position. This caste, as well as the Kirar, claims Rajput origin, and there is some ground for believing that the tribal ancestors belonged to some military clan which settled in the hills, and thus lagged behind the rest in Hrahmani- sation. Tiie Kirar are admitted to be Rajputs of a low class in the Jamna valley, but are repudiated by the Rajputs of Central India and the Narbada valley. On the Orissa border, the Kolta are in occupation of the best lands and prosper accordingly. As they found it necessary to spread, their keen scent ft>r the best settlements brought them into conflict with the wilder tribes, but they held on to what they had got. In the Assam Valley, as in the Central Provinces, the fme of the larger landed proprietors are said to have become Rajputs. In Orissa, some became Khandaits, whilst the Casa, one of the i)rincipal sections, has invented the name Mahisya for itself, to which its claim has been acrimoniously disputed. The Sadgop is most numerously represented in and about the same tract as that which the Kaibartta regard as their early home. It is supposed to have abandoned cowherding, as the Kaibartta 52 5 Ethnography. abandoned fishing, in favour of agriculture. The more prosperous Sadgop are said to be dropping the plough and employing labour on their land, thus paving the way for a higher endogamous subdivision. The caste stands higher in rank than the Kaibartta, owing probably to the superior purity of their traditional occupation. Like other Bengal agriculturists, they are sometimes called Casa, a general term, like that of Kurmi or Kunbi. There is, however, a caste in Orissa to which the name of Casa is specially applied. It is of K61 or Dravidian origin, and whilst admitting members of other castes to its lower ranks, passes in the u])per into that of Karan or Mahant, mentioned above as the lopal writer caste, on the way to establishing touch with the Kayasth. The Gahgautais a small but respectable caste of north Bihar, much the same in position as the Kurmi, but ranking below them, and more lax in their diet. Round Calcutta is found the fishing and cultivating caste of the Pod, lower than those above mentioned. Like the rest, however, it has its lower and ujjper endogamous subdivisions, the latter of which pul in their claim to Ksatriya lineage. Most of the caste are cultivators, but some have acquired considerable estates, whilst others have taken to trade and handicrafts. It appears to be con- sidered to be of Deltaic origin, like the Candal, as the Brahmans who minister to it are avoided by their fellows, but those who only act as teachers remain unpolluted. The Candal or Namasudra, is the largest caste in eastern Bengal, and, as its name suggests, stands very low in the social scale. It is much subdivided, and eight of its main subdivisions are func- tional, and never eat and seldom intermarry with each other. The agri- cultural section stands out from the rest in rank, and next to it comes the boating division. Fishing, however, except for the domestic larder, is strictly prohibited. The Namasudra employ a special class of degraded Brahman of its own, and its barbers and washermen are also members of the caste. The Census was made the occasion of an attempted severance of the caste into S'udra, the superior body, and Nama, the Bengali for "low", to include the rest. It failed. § 36. In the Dekkan and adjoining tracts, the one great cultivating caste is the Kunbi, which has been already treated of in connection with the Maratha. Like every caste spread over a wide area it is much sub- divided, but its position and general constitution are fairly uniform. The corresponding caste in Gujarat, which has been included under the general title, calls itself Kanbi, and is distinct from the Dekkani in origin, and custom as in language. Along with the tradition of early immigration from the north, it has many points of resemblance with the Gujar of the Panjab. The Kanbi is almost entirely agricultural, and is in occupation of the most fertile tracts of Gujarat, with the reputation of making the most of them. The only alternative occupation generally recognised is silk-weaving, to which one of the subdivisions is devoted. A branch of the Kanb'i is settled in the north Dekkan, an ancient domain of the Ahir, or cattie-brceders. Here the caste is known by its old name of Gujar, but its subdivisions are those of the modern caste of the coast. The Khadva Kanbi, one of the main subdivisions, has the custom locally pecu- liar to itself and the Bharvad shepherd, of celebrating its marriages only once every ten or eleven years, according to the vaticinations of their chief sacerdotal advisers. Naturally, so rare an opportunity has to be seized irrespective of the ages of the children, so that not only are infants in arms duly betrothed, but women in the family way join in perambulating Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 53 the nuptial altar, on the understanding that their future offspring, if sex permit, arc thereby made man and wife. As to the relative number of the I\Iarathi and the Gujarati sections of this caste, there are probably at^out 2,700,000 of the former, and 1,350,000 of the latter. The Koll in its various subdivisions is probably an early dark race extruded from the plains by the Kanbi, so far as it is found in the west. Under the same name, it is found from the Panjab Himalaya to the Sahyadri Ghats, not to mention the Kol of the Central Belt. In the first named tract Koli is a general term for the menial classes, amongst whom most of the artisans are included, in Gujarat there is a coast Koli, generally a boatman or fisher, and a large landed class, chiefly in the north of the province, called either Talabda, the Locals, or Dharala, the arm-bearers. Some of its clans intermarry with the lower Rajputs, whose rules of exogamy they have adopted. In or near the hill country the Koli approximates to the Bhll, though perhaps more settled in habit. On the Sahyadri, however, their reputation is lower, and the Malhari branch are apparently the descendants of a wild tribe of the south western Belt, driven westwards by the ad- vancing Muslim or by colonists from Telingana. In the Dravidian country, the castes are remarkably well demarcated by the linguistic divisions, and whilst there are considerable colonies of the northerners in the Tamil country, the reverse movement appears to have been ver)- trifling. In the Karnatic tableland, the cultivating castes are found under a few general headings, such as Vakkaliga and Lirigayat, the former in Mysore, the others further north and east. Under the Lingayat or Lingvant, system, caste is supposed to be merged in the general title, and though this rule was followed to a great extent at the Census, in practice, caste is recognised almost as fully as amongst the orthodox Brahmanists. The community, as a whole, falls under three heads; the original converts of Basava, with a few later additions ; the functional group, and, lastly, the impure castes of village menials. Each section has an amazing number of subdivisions, since nearly every one of the local Brahmanic castes has its Lifigvant subdivision, endogamous and distinct. The general tendency in the present day is to assimilate the Brahmanic organisation under the Jangam, though occasionally the upper classes in- troduce Brahmans as priests. There has been a movement, indeed, to get the whole community recorded as VIrs'aiv, subdivided into the mythical four Varna of the Purusa-Sukta. Irrespective of the latter refinement, the first suggestion refers to a time anterior to the founder of the sect, and in supersession of the usage of centuries. There are a few Lingayats in the Telugu districts, but the movement on the whole is almost exclusively Kanarese in its extent. The Vakkaliga of Mysore correspond to the Kanbi of Gujarat in being subdivided under a general name meaning simply cultivators. Each of the subdivisions is really a separate endogamous caste. The principal ones are the Gangadikara, the Nonaba and the Sada, the second of which is mostly Lingayat, and the third, Jain. There are other sections either functional, like Halu, the cowherds, or geographical, denoting immigration. Most of them have totemistic exogamous subsections. The Pancama and Caturtha Jains and the Lingayats mostly employ their own priests, but the rest are orthodo.x in their relations with the Brahman. On the coast of Kanara the land is held to a great extent by HavTka or Haiga Brahmans, who cultivate the bitel-palm largely through predial low castes. There are also many 54 5- Ethnography. cultivators belonging to the fishing and toddy-drawing classes. The chief caste that can be termed specially agricultural, is the Banta, or warrior, formerly the rank and file of the militia of the Tulu Chiefs. They have a Jain subdivision which keeps to itself. The rest observe some of the Nayar or Malabar customs as to inheritance, and have marriage rules of their t)wn, which have the effect, it is said, of making the tie "as loose as it can be". Their neighbours, the Gauda, are probably settlers from above the Ghiits, where that term is hf>n()rifically used of the headmen of a village. Further east, in south Orissa, the caste bearing the same name derives it, apparently correctly, from the Sanskrjt for cow, as they are of a pastoral character, with traditions of immigration from the north. The jjrincipal agricultural castes of Telingana are the Kapu. the Kamma and the Telaga, all of which much resemble each other and come |)robably from the same stock. The Kapu or Rec.ldi, are widely spread, though less so than formerly. They are reputed to have more than 800 subdivions, which eat together but do not intermarry. Each subdivision is in turn split into endogamous sections. Some of the caste own large estates, earned by military service under the Muslim conquerors of the 14th century, and all are connected in some way or other with the land. The Kamma, like the Kapu, arc often found in colonies in the south far beyond the Tclugu country. The Telaga were once a military caste, and were till recently recruited for the native regiments of the British army, but now they are cultivators of a moderately high position, and only differ from their neighbours in being somewhat more fully Brahmanised. The actual numbers are less than the figure returned owing to the use of their title by other and probably lower castes out of their native district. TheKalingi are both cultivators and temple-ministrants on the Telugu seaboard, with the tradition that they were imported from the north for the latter purpose before Brahmans had reached Andhra territory. They wear, consequently, the sacred thread, but are not recognised by Brahmans as of that order. The rest of the Kalirigi employ their own priests. They are divided, like the Nayar, into two geographical sections with quite different customs. A third has had to be formed for the re- ception of the people expelled from the two others. Their practice is Brahmanic but their exogamous divisions totcmistic. The Tottiyan are the descendants of a military body like the Telaga. They were introduced into the Tamil country, where they are now settled, by the Vijayanagara Chiefs. As their second title is Kambalattan, probably referring to woollen blankets, and their subdivisional titles being also those of a pastoral character, it may be inferred that their original occupation was that of shepherds. Locally they are much dreaded for their magical powers, but in compensation, their cures and charms for snake-bite bear a high re- l)utation. The name VellaUn, in the Tamil country, corresponds in its generality with that Kunbi or Casa in other parts of India, and merely implies a cultivator. The wide diffusion of the community so called prevents it from being a caste, in the sense of a homogeneous body, as irrespective of the four great geograi)hical sections, over 900 subdivisions were re- corded at the census. By careful filtration, the number was substantially diminished; nevertheless, the residue is very large, and owing to the accretions from lower castes as they rise in the world, it is constantly in- creasing. It is unnecessary to point out that in such circumstances the endogamous sections are many and minute. Of the main divisions, that Castes and Caste-Groups. B, The Village community. 55 called the Tondamandalam, of the old Pallava kingdom, round Arcot, stands highest. It settled in its present location in the 8th century A. D., and is strictly Rrahmanistic in customs and religion. The Kongu, on the other hand, who are found in and about Coimbatore, arc so far below the rest that none of the other subdivisions will eat with them, and they are sometimes considered a separate caste, under the name of KavaiK.lan. Apparently, ti)0, their marriage regulations have not passed away from the old Dravidian type, and Brahmans are not employed, as they are amongst all the other Vellalan bodies. In the jMalayalam tract, below the Nayar, ]\Iappila and Nambutiri Brahman, the cultivating castes belong to bodies having other traditional callings, or are field labourers who have occasionally got hold of a small estate. They will be found, therefore, under their respective headings in later paragraphs. ij 37. Specialised cultivators (5,968,700). The majority of the castes coming into this category are branches of the great agricultural bodies, separated from them, as stated above, in view of the inferiority in rural esteem of the produce they cultivate as compared with cereals and other crops grown on a large scale. Thus, the AraTn are of the same stock as the Kambo ; the Mali, Kachf and Murao, are all derived from the Kurml, and the Saini belongs to the Mali. In contradistinction to the growth of roots and vegetables, the care of the bitel-vine has no disgrace attached to it. This may be partly due to the use of vegetable manure only, and partly, no doubt, to the consideration that the presentation of a little packet of the leaf with areca nut is an important formality in social intercourse. In the greater part of India the bitel-vine is grown by a special caste called Baraf, Barui or Bari. The last title, however, is only used south of the Vindhya, and in the north is applied to a lower caste of different occupation. Apart from linguistic distinctions, the Barai is much subdivided into endogamous sections, and most of them hold a good position in society. In the Dekkan and Karnatic there is a small caste of Brahmans, the Tirgiij, who have taken to growing the bitel-vine, and the Bari are said to be immigrant from Central India. In the Tamil country, the Scnai kkiidaiyan do what most of the Barai avoid, that is, sell the leaves themselves, instead of making them over to another caste for the market. This caste has the further peculiarity of belonging to the Left- hand in the local distribution, thereby grouping itself with the artisans, a position which does not, however, militate against its respectability, or prevent the Brahman from sharing with Vellalan the priestly ministrations required in the caste. The Kodikkal, another bitel-vine growing caste is only a subdivision of the VeOajan, based, apparently, upon its occupation. As the areca-palm only flourishes in certain localities, its cultivation is undertaken by the ordinary agricultural classes. Reverting to the market gardener, the Arain of the Panjab is a true caste in the north and east of the Province, but in the west the title is purely occupational, like Jat in the same tract. The community seems to have come up the Indus from Multan or north-west Rajputana, and settled along the Ghaggar river, then probably of an irrigational capacity it has long since lost. Thence they spread across the Jamna into Rohilkhand, and northwards into Jalandhar, which is still one of their principal seats. Here they are not only garderncrs but general cultivators of considerable reputation for skill and industry. They are, as stated above, akin to the higher caste of the Kambo, but with a far greater inclination to accept Islam. The 56 5- Ethnography. Miliar of the north-west, who arc entirely Muslim, are lower in position than the Arain, though they appear from the names of their subdivisions to be a branch of that caste. The Mali get their name from the garlands it was their mission to prepare for the decoration of the temple deities and ti) throw round the necks of honoured guests at social ceremonies. They have long branched out into all kinds of garden cultivation, and their numerous subdivisions are frequently based upon the produce to which they are respectively devoted. Those who grow flowers, for instance, do not intermarry with the vegetable -growers, and the latter draw a distinction between themselves and the branch wliich grows onions, turnips or turmeric. The KachI has taken in upper India to the poppy and le- guminous edibles, leaving roots to his poorer relative the Murao, who is said to take his name from the radishes he grows. Some sections of the Kachf, again, abstain from cultivating the sugarcane or chillies. The Sainj, another branch of the Mali, are found in the east Panjab and in Rohilkhand, where they are as much general cultivators as gardeners. In the former tract a good many of them are Sikhs, but the more prosperous claim Rajput blood. They stand high in their calling and seem to be living down the taint of the garden. In the Peninsula, south of the sphere of the Mali, the only specialised cultivator in addition to those already mentioned, is the Ti gal a, now located in Mysore and the south Dekkan. This seems to be one of the few castes which have moved northwards from the Tamil country, but they have retained neither the customs nor language of their origin. t; 38. Cattle-breeders (11,965,500). These are taken next to the agri- culturists because they occupy a very similar social position, and also because, with the expansion of tillage, the grazing area is getting restricted and a good many of the formerly roving castes have settled down to cultivation. The prominent place assigned to cattle in the Suktas and the universal veneration of the Brahmanic community for the cow bear testi- mony to the antiquity as to the honourable character of the calling, and in upper India the cattle-breeder ranks almost as high as the cultivator. This is not invariably the case, however. The wandering life arouses suspicions of unorthodox feeding and intercourse generally. Then, too, the use of the ox in agriculture now vies in importance with that of the cow in domestic life ; but the supply of the indispensable bullock cannot be kept up without surgical operations repugnant to the conventional notions of jnirity and respect for animal life. Furthermore, the supply of milk for the home is, by all Vedic tradition, commendable, but the sale of dairy produce as a trade entails relegation to a lower position. In old times, however, the Abhira, or cowherding tribes, were powerful in the Satpura, the south Ganges valley and even the lower portions of Nepal, and founded dynasties which were overthrown by the Gond in the first- named traC; and by the Kirata in the last. The leading tribes seem to have been of western origin, and are supposed to have entered India long after the Vedic Arya. In upper India they go by the name of Ahir, derived from the Abhira just mentioned, a term which was applied by some Sanskrit authors to all tribes of the lower classes throughout the north- west. Under this name they are spread in considerable numbers all over Rajputana, Malva, the south-eastern Panjab, the upper Gangetic valley and Bihar. To the east, the lack of wide stretches of open pasture has prevented the formation and maintenance of a strong and well-organised Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 57 pastoral community, so a number of distinct and generally not very large subdivisions are grouped under the general title of Goala, recruited from many local castes of lower origin than the pastoral bodies of the north. Many of them, too, are as much agriculturists as cattle-breeders. The same may be said, also, of the Ahir themselves, in the Panjab, where they are amongst the most successful and enterprising cultivators of the Province. They have never, it is true, achieved a dominant position any- where in modern times, but the Jat and Gujar treat them as equals, ex- cept, of course, in regard to intermarriage. According to the Census, about half the total number of Ahir are found in Agra, Oudh and Bihar. They are said to have migrated to these regions from the plains of Kach, west Rajputana and Kathidvad. Assuming their connection with these parts, especially the last named, a basis will be found for their invariable assertion in the Gangetic region that the cradle of the Ahir is Mathura. Few legends are more wide spread in India than that of the dalliance of the most popular of Puranic deities, Krsna, with the Gopi, or milk- maids, of the Vraj district: and the Jaduvansi line, headed by Kr.sna himself, found its second home, after its expulsion from Mathura, at Dvarka and in the north of Marvad, the very tracts inhabited by the Ahir before they entered Hindustan. Traditional descent from the IMathura Jaduvansi is not, however, confined to the Ahir of the north, but is claimed by the Gaura and other cowherds of Orissa, and even by some far to the south of the Arja pale. Except in the Panjab, the Ahir enjoys but a poor reputation as a husbandman, though everj'where he is admitted to be company for the higher peasantry. This, however, may be, as in the case of the Gujar in those parts, a question of policy, with a side-glance towards the village cattle, which are too apt to stray into the Ahir's herd without their rightful owners' knowledge or consent. The Gaul i of the west Central Provinces and north Dekkan, is the descendant of the tribes which, as just mentioned, once ruled the Satpura from Khandesh and the Sahyadri, to near Saugor, and were only expelled by the Gond in the i6th century. As they are mentioned in the Nasik cave inscriptions, they must have been long established in their dominion. Alongside of them is the Govari caste, which has no trace of immigration either in nomenclature or tradition. In the Chattisgarh country, to the east, comes the Ravat, another cattle- breeding caste of long standing in that region. The two last mentioned castes which in 1 891 numbered about 350,000 persons, do not appear at all in the returns for 1901, so they have probably been compiled under Ahir or some other general title. Two other cattle-breeding castes of upper India may be mentioned, the GhosT, an offshoot of the Ahir, or as some think, of the Gujar, which has been converted to Islam. They occupy a comparatively low position, and near the large towns confine their attention to the dairy side of their occupation. The other caste is the Rabari of Rajputana and the Gujarat peninsulas. They are of Marvad origin, but wandered to the coast, and now breed both cattle and camels, and some of them even become shepherds. In the north they confine their trade to camels. In the Dekkan, the Gauli, and further south, the Go 11 a, represent this industry. In the Tamil country, the cultivator generally breeds his own cattle, and only one caste devoted to this occupation appears in the return. This is the Kannadiyan, a small body, of apparently upland origin. The Golla of the Telugu and Kanarese tracts, are thoroughly local castes, but, having become Brahmanised, cast back to Mathura and 58 5- Ethnography. the Gupi. Most of them are settled in villages, but f)nc section, in Mysore, is still nomadic during the open season, and does not intermarry with the others. In Mysore it used to be the duty or privilege of the Golla to guard State treasure in transit, and the official now responsible for sending off the remittances is still occasionally called by that name, albeit he may be a Brahman or Muslim. Sj 39. Village artisans and servants. Handicrafts and mechanical arts have always held a low place in jiublic esteem in India, and to this day, in societies moulded on archaic lines such as those of the lower Himalaya, the division between them and agricultural occupations is very marked. An exception is found, as a rule, in the worker in the precious metals, a trade tolerated, if ncjt honoured, even in Vedic times. Throughout the greater part of India the castes of the artisans are graduated according to the material used in the calling. a I Combined crafts (1,263,900). From at least the date of the Ma- habharata, five trades, called the Pafickalsi", stand out from the rest, and arc usually grouped together. The goldsmith comes first, except in Bengal. Then comes the brass and coppersmith and next the carpenter or other worker in wood. The blacksmith follows in a lower place, partly, no doubt, because his is a dirty calling, partly because he has to use bellows made of oxhide, and partly, again, because the metal in which he works is black, the unlucky colour. In the Gangetic valley, too, there may be some association between the village and the nomad blacksmith, who is probably of K61 origin and shares the reputation of the gipsy tinker and farrier of Europe. The fifth place in this hierarchy belongs to the stone-worker, which, exept in the south, is a more modern and probably a purely functional body. The above castes are not always strictly separated in occupation: sometimes the carpenter becomes a blacksmith, and the masonry, like bricklaying is done by an outsider; the latter being held to verge upon the task of the potter, which is impure. In the Dravidian country the five are found merged in a single group, called the Kammajan in Tamil, Karhsala in Telugu, andPancala in the Karnatic. The occupations then fall into subdivisions. This cohesion seems to have been promoted, if not initiated, by sectarian influence. It appears that in this part of India the artisans used formerly to be excluded from the main village site, and forced, like the leather-workers and scavengers, to live in hamlets of their own, detached from the rest of the community. As their work grew in impor- tance, their origin, which was probably amongst the servile classes, tended to be forgotten or ignored, and they were admitted within the walls, and allowed certain privileges in the way of social display which had before been reserved for the higher classes. Then followed the great Southern schism of the Right and the Left-handed castes, in which the artisans arrayed themselves en masse against the Brahmans and few others. It is now gencr.'illy held that this movement arose out of the levelling doctrines of the Buddhists or Jains of the south, which had been largely adopted by the lower classes; but whether the artisans, thus encouraged, led a revolt against Brahmanical authority, or whether, on the decline of Buddhism, the Brahmans took this means of setting the schismatics back into their place, is not certain. In the present day, the differences between the two factions, which are acrimonious and often turbulent, arise, not out of doc- trinal questions, but on points of what may be termed processional privi- leges, such as the right to have the marriage-escort preceded by drums Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 59 and trumpets, to have a mounted convoy in attendance, to carry certain emblems of a quasi-religious signification ; above all, to exceed a con- ventional maximum number of pillars to the marriage-booth. Castes whose technical skill and circumstances have raised them far above the class from which they sprang have often shown the tendency, as stated in an earlier section, to embrace a new scheme of reform which combines religious doctrine with the weakening of the barriers which prevent their equivalent rise in social position, and in this case the democratic teachings of Jainism and Buddhism had the further backing of the propaganda of Basava in the north Karnatic, with the result that most of the Paiicala became Liiigayat and, therefore, anti-Brahmanist. None of the Five grouped- sections employs Brahmans or acknowledges the authority of that order, and all ceremonies are performed by priests of their own body. For some time past the Panckalsi have claimed descent from Visvakarman, the He- phaestos of the Brahmanic pantheon, and call themselves Visva Brahmans, assuming all the attributes of the sacerdotal order. In this respect the Southerners do not stand alone, since a similar claim is put forward by various artisan castes in other parts of India, especially by the goldsmiths. It is needless to say that whatever title or practice may obtain currency within the community, its sanction by the outside world has to be secured through the Brahman, who naturally will have none of it. Authorities differ as to the homogeneity of the Panckalsi. By some it is said that the occu- pations are interchangeable, and that families or individuals pass from one to another without any alteration of social status or loss of right of inter- marriage. Others say that in the Tamil country- the divisions do not ge- nerally intermarry, but that this is not the case in the Telugu country-, where all five certainly eat together, and are said to intermarry. The Kanarese branches follow the rules of the Liiigayat community. In the Malabar tract the five stand on a different footing, and take a far lower position. They are amongst the impure castes and do not employ their own people as Brahmans. The As'ari, or carpenter, who is the house- builder of the coast, stands above the rest, and at the ceremonies con- nected with the erection of a building he is allowed to wear the sacred thread. The Tattan (goldsmiths 1, Kollan (blacksmiths), and Mus'ari (coppersmiths), intermarry. The stonemason is not an important coast artisan, but above the Sahyadri and in the south, the number of stone temples and images is so large and their use so ancient, that the functions of the stone-worker have always been in great request ; so much so, that in some of the inscriptions this craftsman is invested with the title of Acarya, or teacher, which though the Panckalsi nowadays use it of each other, is not ordinarily conferred on any but religious or literary instructors. In consequence of the use of the general title Kammalan instead of the sub- division, it is impossible to give the numbers of the Panckalsi exercising the respective trades included under it, except for the comparatively limited population of the Malabar coast, and this, irrespective of the peculiar constitution of the community, is a reason for dealing with the latter apart from the corresponding castes of the rest of India. There is, how- ever, in Bengal, a somewhat similar grouping in the case of the Kamar or metal-working castes. This body apparently started with a variety of functional groups of different origins, and is now welded into a sort of caste, subdivided according to the metal used, and bearing the general title usuallv given elsewhere to the worker in iron. The legend in which 6o 5. Ethnography. the Kamar trace their descent from Visvakarman, indeed, is very much the same as that by which the iron-smelting Asura of the Kol race justify their origin from the same ancestor, thus confirming the general view as to the non-Aryan foundation of the caste. The social graduation of the subdivisions is curious, in that the worker in iron stands first, and inter- marries only with the worker in brass, and the bell-metal craftsman stands above the goldsmith. The latter, indeed, under the name of Sckara, or Svarnakiir, though he holds himself higher than the wealthy Subarnabanik, mentioned along with the Traders, must have something against him from days of old, as the Brahmans which serve his subdivision are not in com- munion with the rest of their order, whilst those who perform similar functions for the rest of the Kamar are under no such interdiction. The Niyariya, or Dhuldhoya, is a parasitic caste upon the Sonar, and lives by extracting the gold out of the refuse of the latter's shop. He is usually allowd to be Sonar in blood as in occupation, but in the north is often a Muslim, even when the goldsmith is Brahmanist. b) Gold and silver workers (1,290,500). The goldsmith is very often a pawnbroker and money-lender as well as a manufacturer of the orna- ments which constitute the main capital of the peasantry and indeed of most Indian middle classes, and in both capacities has acquired a very indifferent reputation for straight-dealing. According to one popular saying, he so regretted having made a nose-ring for his own mother without sufTiciently adulterating the metal that he cut her nose off to recover it. In the Gangetic region the caste, which is subdivided to an astounding extent, is said to be a composite one, but still holds a position superior to that of the other artisans. It is said to be clo.sing up its ranks, too, and forming large endogamous sub-castes out of its numerous minute exogamous sections. In this tract the Sonar does not seem to be putting forward the same pretensions to be Brahman that he does further south. c) Carpenters (2,688,100) and d) Blacksmiths (2,362,300). It is the Lohar and Rarhaf, who refer themselves back to Visvakarman, and who have a joint sub-caste called Ojha claiming to be Brahmans, not apparently without a certain degree of recognition, though not to the full extent of their desire. In the west, the Sutar, or carpenter, throws back to the Gujar or Vania, and in the Dekkan, to the inevitable Visvakarman. The Lohar seems everywhere constant to the latter. There seems to be a general tendency to make these two functions interchangeable even though the castes remain distinct. In the Maratha districts, both above and below the Sahyadri, the Sutar does the village ironwork, consisting mainly of simple repairs such as retyring cart-wheels or reshoeing the plough and so on. In the western Panjab it is the same. In the east of that Province, the Tar khan and the Lohar arc the same caste by origin, but the car- penter stands higher, and when both occupations are followed, sub-sections are formed which do not eat together or intermarry. There is also a body of Lohar in the south, along the Rajputana border, consisting of Rajputs who, from stress of circumstances, probably famine, were driven to adopt this means of getting their living, and though called Lohar, are ai)art from and above the rest. The Khati, again, is both carpenter and blacksmith in some parts of the north, ranking with the former, but along the Jamna the caste is wheelwright, and considered a subdivision of the Barhai. e) Masons (51,400). The Thavi of the sub-Himalayan region, is an offshoot of the carpenter, but, as the dwellings in those parts are chiefly Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 6i of stone, the caste has developed into masons as well as workers in wood, and in the plains, too, the Raj, when the title is not merely functional, is a carpenter turned mason. The large caste of the SutradhSr in Bengal, is of local origin, probably akin to the Kaibartta, but is now much subdivided into functional groups taking rank a good deal according to the nature of their work, such as boat-building (one of the lowest), wheelwright, builder, turner and painter, all independent of each other. Some have established a body of priests of their own. The barber, whose function is one of the touchstones of rank, considers them high enough to be shaved by him, but will not undertake their pedicure. This discrimination between the different branches of the craft is found elsewhere. The car- penter who undertakes the repair of municipal conservancy carts, for example, has, for an obvious reason, to sacrifice his position ; and the making of oil-presses and, as just mentioned, boat-building, is considered degrading, owing, probably, to the indirect connection of these articles with the destruction of life. Both carpenter and blacksmith belong to the class of village artisans remunerated by customary shares in the year's harvest. During the cultivating season, therefore, they are bound to de- vote their time to the needs of their clients, but during the rest of the year they make carts, bedsteads, irrigation-wheels, and other articles which are charged for in the ordinary way, at a price either cash or kind, more usually the latter. The workers in brass and copper appear among the Panckalsi, and can claim considerable antiquity, but they are urban rather than village castes, and are rarely found, except casually, in any place smaller than the local market town. At the same time, their occupation enters largely into village life, since there is no more distinctive mark of the prosperity of a tract than the substitution of metal vessels, especially of the larger sorts, for the porous earthenware which was formerly in universal use. Once established, the demand for the former is extensive, as each family requires its own complete set, to obviate the risk of con- tamination by contact with other castes. f) Brass and copper workers (206,800). The manufacture and provision of these articles are in the hands of the Kasera and Thathcra castes in upper India, and in those of the cognate bodies called Kasar, Kansara and Tambat, in the west, and Bo gar <:ir Kannan in the south. In the Karnatic the Caturtha and Pancama Jains have a good deal of this trade in their hands. In the north they hold a better position than in the south, having traditions of Banya origin. In the sub-Himalayan tract, however., they belong to the earlier and darker tribes. They seem to be, on the whole, more homogeneous than most castes, possibly because their trade has fewer ramifications, and they do not deal, as a rule, in the articles they make, but dispose of them to special traders for sale to the public. At the periodical gatherings at the great centres of pilgrimage, the booths of the brass and copper vendors are well to the fore in the fair which is always held as a subsidiary attraction on such occasions, and as the wares are conveniently portable, the business is brisk. The mason, which is the last craftsman to be dealt with under this group, does not, in most parts of upper India constitute a real caste, but belongs to a functional group recruited either from the carpenter and lower menial castes, or occasionally from others, whose members have been driven to manual labour, and selected the branch which is least associated with impure ma- terials. There are, however, true castes of this trade, such as the Gaundi 62 5- Ethnography. and Ka(,li6 of the Dekkan and Gujarat, who have lived down their pro- bably pre-Aryan descent. The stoneworkers of the south and some of the masons, largely consist of members of the salt-working castes whose oc- cupation, since the manufacture of salt was undertaken by the State, has been seriously restricted. In Gujarat, the caste has been formed by se- paration from the agricultural labourer, and in parts of the Gangetic valley, from the lime-burners and manufacturers of saltpetre. The making of bricks, owing to the impurity t)f the material used for the kiln, rests with the Kumbhar, or Potter caste, which comes into a later group. §40. Weavers (9,541,000). The people of India were wearing cotton garments in the days of Megasthenes, and do so still. No wonder, there- fore, that the occupation of hand-loom weaving is one of the most widely distributed in the country, and forms the traditional calling of castes containing nearly ten millions of people. In its palmy days the craft reached a wonderful pitch of skill and refinement, especially under the patronage of the Delhi Court, which monopolised the whole of the Dacca output of "flowing-water", "gossamer" and other choice muslins, the art of weaving which has long been lost. Even the staple everyday fabrics made far beyond the imperial ken, at the seaports of the gulf of Cambay, the Malabar and the Coromandel coasts, always found a ready market in Europe and the Levant. The weaving community seems, nevertheless, to have been anything but prosperous. Before the end of the i8th century they were reported by British officials to be "a timid and helpless" folk, and even then, were, as recent experience has proved them to be still, among the first to feel the pinch of famine, when a wide-spread failure of crops reduced or stopped the purchasing power of the peasantry. Since then their market has been seriously curtailed by the competition of European machine-made goods, and it is only in the coarser lines of material that they hold their own. The weaver is not one of the menials who is, so to speak, on the village staff: that is, he is not entitled to a customary share of the harvest, but is paid for what he makes and sells. With one or two exceptions, the weaver castes occupy a low position, considering the character and utility of their function. This is doubtless due to the fact that the latter originated amongst the pre-.Aryan races, who subsequently became the helots of those to whom cotton was unknown before they exchanged the steppes of the north for the more genial tem- perature of sub-tropical India. The weaver, though below the peasantry, is far above the village menials who do field-labour and work in leather and other impure materials. He represents, in fact, the highest rank to which castes of that origin can attain. Perhaps the best instance of this position is found in the Tanti of Lower Bengal, who enjoy a rank much above that of any other weaving-caste, and even, intermarry, when suf- ficiently wealthy, with castes like the Kayasths. In their case, however, there is no question of evolution from any lower Deltaic tribe. It is not known whence they came, but the country in which they are now found is not a cotton-growing tract, and the weaving industry, accordingly, was probably introduced from the north-west, the origin of the craftsmen being obscured by promiscuous recruitment, and condoned in consideration of their skill and utility. There are other cases of weaver castes of superior position, such as the Khatrl or Patve of Gujarat and Central India, w^ho, from the beginning dealt with no fabric but silk, and the probably kindred caste of Pattunurkaran, in the Tamil country, which found its way by devious Castes and Caste-groups. B. The Village coMjruNiTY. 63 routes and with many halts, from Malva to the south. But the mere re- striction of their operations to the more valuable products is nut, of itself, enough to raise the caste above its fellows in the eyes of the world, for the Tantva of Bihar, who are silk-workers, but also breed the worm, rank far below the Tanti, who use cotton. On the other hand, the handling of jute or hemp seems of itself to keep a caste to the bottom of the craft, as in the case of the Perike and Janappan of the Dravidian country, the Kapali of Bengal, and the Dhor of the Dckkan. In regard to the evolution of the weaver from the servile castes, a good instance is found in the east of the Central Provinces and the adjoining Orissa hills, where the process is still going on. The Panka, a tribe of Kol or Dravidian origin, with its cxogamous totemistic structure, does the coarse weaving of the tract, and also cultivates, either as an occu])ant or a field labourer; but in many villages it is not admitted within the site, and has to dwell, like other impure menials, in a detached hamlet. In the Central Provinces the Panka has joined the Kabirpanthi sect in considerable numbers, like the leatherworking castes of the neighbourhood, with the further inducement that the founder of the sect was himself a weaver. The Ganda, another weaving caste of the same region, but mostly inhabiting the ])lains, is closely related to the Panka, and, indeed, is often held to be a subdivision of the latter; but its members are now not weavers so much as cultivators, village watchmen and drummers, nor do they share the Kabirpanthi views of the Others. To the south of these castes, acros^ the hills, are the Domba, a tribe of hill weavers, low in their habits and trade-skill. They mostly belong to the ISIadras territory, but, from their name, it is possible that they may appertain to the great Dom tribe of the north of the Ganges, members of which are found detached in the Dekkan and Karnatic. Like the Panka, they are classed with the lower menials of the village, and perform the same unhonoured functions. In nearly all the other parts of India the differentiation of the artisan from the menial has been more definitely carried out. The Kori, the chief Brahmanic weaving caste of Upper India, together with the Julaha, the corresponding division of the IMuslim, are now (juite detached from the leather-working caste from which, according to the nomenclature of their subdivisions, they sprang. In the case of the Julaha, the sectional affix is falling into disuse, and with it the customs with which it is associated. The Kori adhere more closely to their ancestral practices, possibly because the chances of rising in position in the Brahmanic world are not to be compared with those offered by Islam, as embodied in the popular saying — "Last year I was a Julaha (or Nadaf); this year, a Saikh, and next year, if the harvest be good, I shall be a Saiad". Both castes work chiefly in the coarser fabrics, as they have been hard hit by foreign competition in the finer class of weaving. Some of the KOri sections are of the Kabirpanthi sect, but others pay their respects to both the orthodox Brahmanic deities and to the popular Muslim saints of the locality, a practice reciprocated by the Ju- laha, who worship Mata Bhavanf, where she holds the popular favour. The Julaha of the cities have the reputation of being a specially factious and quarrelsome body — "Eight Julaha fighting over nine hukkahs" — say their neighbours. The place of the K(>ri is taken by the Balahi in Rajputana and Central India, a caste allied, like the rest, to the Camar, or leather-worker. In southern India the weaver castes, though varying in rank, seem to have long acquired a higher position than in the north. 64 5- Ethnography. The Kaikkulan, or Tamil weavers, share, it is true, an ancestor with the Paraiyan or menial caste, and used to be relegated with the rest of the Kammala with whom they were classed, to a detached hamlet. By dint of clean living, however, and the employment of Brahmans, they now occupy a respectable position. Most of the other weavers of this part of India are of Kanarese origin. A good many are returned simply under the general title of Neyige, the Mysorean term for weaver, and are probably, like the Sale of various subdivisions, very largely Liiigayats. The Sale have long been settlers to some extent in the Tamil country where they wove silk with much profit, but lost ground under the competition of the still more skilful Pattunurkaran. In the Dekkan and Central Provinces they are found in different grades, according to whether they work only in white or add a border or fringe of coloured silk. The Devaiiga and the Togata are other sections of the Kanarese weaving community, lower in position than the above. The Togata, indeed, are not found in their native country at all, but have permanently settled in the south. A caste of Bengal weavers, the Jilgl, has been mentioned in connection with the ascetic body of a similar name. Its origin is unascertained, but it is not affiliated to the leather-workers. Its low position may be partly attributed to the pretensions it has made to higher rank, thereby entailing an unusual con- centration of Brahmanic displeasure. Though suffering like its fellows from European competition, the caste till recently had stuck fairly closely to its traditional calling. The Ko.sti of the Maratha country h'olds, like the Kaikkolan, a middle jjlace between the silk-weaver and those of servile origin. Brahmans are em[)loyed in the caste ceremonies and the Ko.sti lives, as a rule, very like the poorer Kunbi. The famines of recent years caused much distress amongst this caste, and, from their sedentary- life, it was difficult to adopt means for giving them fitting relief work. They are endeavouring to evade the results of foreign competition by weaving British yarn, whereby they produce a fabric which combines fineness with the strength and durability of hand-loom work. § 41. Oil-pressers (4,517,600). Wherever oil-yielding seed or nut is grown there is an oil-press in every village of average size. The material most extensively used in the interior is sesame, with linseed and the castor-bean for burning. Along the coast the coco-nut is the chief oil- producing material. The castes engaged in oil-pressing do not everywhere take the same social position. Generally, their rank is low, because the occupation is undeniably a dirty one ; but there arc degrees even in im- purity. In most parts those who only press sesame, or oil used in cookery, are higher than those who prepare the oils used for burning or lubri- cation. But sometimes a distinction is drawn between those who get out the oil by boiling the seed and the majority, who use the press. Amongst the latter, in turn, those who yoke two bullocks to the press take prece- dence ovei those who use only one, and the subdivisions are named ac- cordingly. In the present day, however, the single bullock is the rule, and this blindfolded and unfortunate agent is everywhere the proverbial type of dull and endless toil. Finally, the oil may be allowed to drip through a hole in the press or may be baled out of the receiver with a little rag- mop. In parts of Bengal the latter process alone is honourable, the reason being that when oil i)rocured by the former was presented to the goddess Bhagvatf, she drew a trenchant and celestially outspoken analogy between the form of press and the human body, in token of her disapproval of Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 65 the method adopted. Hence, the Tcli who mops out his oil will have no intercourse with the Kalu, though both are subdivisions of the same caste. In the Panjab the Tcli is Muslim, and one of the divisions has separated into a distinct body, the Oasab or butcher, both ranking with the Julaha. In other parts of upper India, the Brahmanist Tcli is resiicc- tablc, but on a low plane, and some, including those of Bihar, are served only by Brahmans who are out of communion with their fellows. In Bengal, Gujarat and the Dekkan, the oil-prcsser is often a grain-dealer or shop-keeper, and in the first named province attains to considerable wealth and importance. In the Dravidian country the caste is known by the name of the oil-press, Sekkan or Vaniyan, in the Tamil districts, and Gandla, Ganiga, or Jotipan, in Tclugu and Kanarcse. The Telugu and Tamil castes employ Brahmans, wear the thread and generally follow the customs of the upper castes of cultivators. The Kanarese castes are more subdivided, but employ Havika Brahmans when available. Some are Lingayats. The oil-presser in Malabar stands on a different footing to the rest. In the northern region he is ranked with the impure, and kept down. In the south of the tract, however, he is one of the castes which has crejjt under the comprehensive title of Nayar. In neither case do the oil-pressing castes wear the sacred thread as they do above the Sahyadri, nor do they employ Brahmans. The trade is one which has suffered considerably of late from the competition of mineral oil for burning purposes, and numbers of the Teli are taking to cultivation for a living. § 42. Potters (3,521,8001. The Potter is one of the recognised village staff, and in return for his customary share in the harvest is bound to furnish the earthenware vessels required for domestic use. His occupation goes back to the time of the Vedic Suktas, and varies in its demands upon the worker according to the customs of the province or tract, the consumption of earthen platters being in some parts enormous, whilst elsewhere metal is substituted, except for water and storage. The po- sition of the Kumhar, Kumbhar, or Kus'avan, is above that of the helots, but is undoubtedly low. This is made manifest by the association of the caste with the donkey, the saddle-animal of S'itala, the goddess of small- pox. The Dhobi, or washerman, is the only other of the settled or village castes which makes use of that useful, but in India foulfeeding, animal. Where the caste is much subdivided those who use the bullock for carriage are superior to the patron of the humbler animal. Those who work on the wheel, again, do not intermarry with those who use a mould or make images. Elsewhere there is a distinction drawn between the artificer who only makes large vessels, and accordingly stands to his work, and him who squats on the ground. As in the case of the weavers and oil-pressers, the Bengal potter seems to enjoy a better position than his comrade of upper India. In Madras, too, both Telugu and Tamil Kusavan wear the sacred thread, and some sub-divisions employ Brahmans, as in Bengal, whilst others have priests of their own community. Where bricks are in use the potter undertakes the kiln, and though, as above stated, he has to use fuel collected from sweepings and other refuse, he is not called upon to touch the lowest kinds of filth, and escapes therefore the condemnation inflicted upon the scavenger. His donkey, too, where it is in general use, is employed when the kiln is not in operation in carrying grain and other produce. In most parts of the country, the potters some- Indo-Aryan Research. II. b. 5 66 5- Ethnography. times hold land, and in others take service in large households. In the Telugu country they are even in request as cooks, one of their traditional occupations in that region. 5; 43. Barbers (3,698,300). Shaving and the paring of nails are important parts of many Brahmanic ceremonies. The arrangement of mar- riages is the work of an expert and trustworthy go-between; the formal communication of domestic occurrences (except deaths), the provision of music before processions, the accompanying, with a torch if necessary, of distinguished strangers on their arrival in the village, together with the essential function of gossip, all these qualifications and duties go to make the barber a much esteemed member of the village hierarchy, on a regular annual stipend either from the individual householder or out of the land or its produce. The Nai, Napit, Ambattan, Mangala, or Hajam, moreover, is usually the only person in an average village with any knowledge of surgery, though other castes can come to the rescue of a person afflicted by such ailments as are known to yield to charms or spells. It is this practice of surgery, it is to be feared, which relegates the Barber to a social position much below the esteem he enjoys as an individual. The caste, however, as a whole, is exclusive and particular. In some tracts of the west, each caste has its own barber who will attend to no other. Everywhere, too, there is a social limit below which a barber will not shave. Nor, though his mediation is essential to the announcement of good tidings in a formal manner, will he ever consent to carry round the news of a death, a duty which is imposed upon a caste which is presumed to be below the bad luck likely to accrue from so doleful a task. In most parts of India except the Panjab, where the Jhinvar's wife takes the office, or where a Camari is employed, the barber's wife is the midwife or monthly nurse, and occasionally she acts as hair-dresser and manicurist to women. In Bengal, the latter occupation is alone the custom, and that but rarely. Indeed, the position of the caste, as well as that of the Bhani.lari, the barber caste of Orissa, is much better in the east than in other parts. An exception must be made in favour of the ^larayan of the IMalabar coast, who in the north of the tract is the barber of the Nayar, but as the south is approached, sheds his occupation to some extent, and acts as drummer generally, and as Nayar priest at funerals. Still further down the coast, the work of shaving is left to a caste called Velakkattalavan, but which calls itself Nayar. Meanwhile, the Marayan have passed into temple-service, drumming and the conduct of funerals, and give themselves the name of Attikuricci or Ambalavasi. Under this transformation, the caste ranks next to the Brahman, and will not eat with Nayar: but no more will the Nayar eat with the Ambalavasi. The Mangala are the barbers of the Telugu districts, but as their connection with preparing the mourners for a funeral renders that name unlucky, they arc usually addressed as Bajantri, or musicians, in reference to the other branch of their profession. The barber is everywhere credited with vast experience of the outside world, together with a quite exceptional accjuaintance with the esoteric affairs of all the families in his village. The Brahman, therefore, ministers to him without reluctance, and what with fees, presents, feast offerings and other emoluments, he often acquires quite a well-to-do position and is respected accordingly. There are as many proverbs about him as about his confrere in the West, and both he and his razors are mentioned in the Suktas of the Rgvcda. Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 67 !< 44. Washermen (2,887,600). In the south and west of India, the washerman is generally jjlaced next below the Barber castes, but in Agra, Oudh, Bihar and Bengal, his position is far lower. This difference arises from convention and custom. In the one region, all but the wealthy do their own washing, either in person, at the tank in the mornings, or through the women of the family. In the north and east, however, the handling of soiled clothes is a polluting task, and the Dhobi ranks no higher than the leather-worker. He is moreover associated in these parts with the donkey, like the Kumhar, and pays the penalty of the convenience. In most parts of upper India, in Bengal and in the Panjab and parts of the Karnatic, the washerman is one of the hereditary village staff, and gets his share of the crops like the artisans. In Bengal he has even to take a jiart in the marriage-rite of the superior castes, a function which he is not called upon to perform elsewhere. At the same time, it is usually a lucky omen if on leaving home one catches sight of a Dhobi in clean clothes. The last qualification is of uncertain signification. It may be due to its rarity, or, again, it may be connected with a popular saying that the Dhobi's outer garments belong to his patrons. Except, however, in the localities just named, the Dhobi belongs to the town rather than to the village. In the south, the Vannan, like the Dhobi of Hindustan, have a subdivision which will wash the clothes of the lowest classes. In Malabar only the women of the caste do washing and the men work as tailors. The Nayar have a caste of washermen to themselves, under the title of Veluttedan, or Vannattan, who often describes himself, at the Census and otherwise, as belonging to the tribe of his emi^loyers. The Kanarese washerman is the Agasa. In the Telugu country, the Cakala have a subdivision which occupies itself exclusively with dyeing, and holds itself superior to the rest. It seems, indeed, to be connected with the Velama caste of agriculturists. In the Panjab there is a similar connection between the Dhobi and the dyer, and in some of the north-central districts of the Province the two castes are returned impartially by either trade. § 45- Fishing, Boating and Porter castes (6,825,400). Of the large and numerous castes which look back to fishing as their traditional oc- cupation comparatively few now exercise that calling as their principal means of subsistence, and these are localised, of course, on the coast and along the larger rivers. Those communities which have abandoned fishing have become, generally speaking, separate subcastes, which regard them- selves as superior in position to those who remain faithful to the net. In this process of refinement, the first stage is usually the restriction of the ancestral connection with the water to boating and sea-faring. In the many tracts where fish is not a staple food among the masses and where there is an in- sufficient opening in the boat and ferry line, the fisher castes took to the porterage of such burdens as can be conveyed by poles across the shoulder, such as packages and large jars, or travellers by palki. It is probable that in the days when the latter mode of communication was the only alter- native to walking or riding it fell to the bearers to provide the means of quenching the thirst of their fare in mid journey. At all events, now- adays, except in South India and the Dekkan, water brought by those castes or subdivisions which no longer catch fish is accepted without cavil by the highest classes. As water is the element above all through which personal contamination can be conveyed, the privileged position thus conferred upon the castes in question became assured, and the next 68 5- Ethnography. step forward was the admission of the caste into domestic service in the house. This was followed by the recognition of the fisher caste as public cook, to the extent of parching grain and preparing sweetmeats for the community at large, and selling them in shops. Thus, in the north and east of India to which the above remarks mainly apply, the fisherman basis is found in the Bhadbhunja, the Kandu and the Bhatiara, or cook of the Panjab, all of which, with a few others of similar trade, are now, for all practical purposes, entirely distinct castes. Elsewhere, the separation has been ecjually exclusive, though manifested only by subdivision of the main caste. The Jaliya or IMecho Kaibartta of Bengal, for instance, the chief fishing community of the coasts of that province, stands lower than the Haliya, or ploughing division. The Koli, too, of the west coast, is distinct from the Talabdii, or agricultural section of this caste, and is called Machi, or fisher, along-side of a separate caste of that name, one of whose main subdivisions is called Kujf. The Bhoi, again, has two separate sections, the freshwater fisherman and the porter or servant. The Boya, of Telingana, which appears to be the nucleus of the caste, is divided into a village or settled section, which fishes and engages in service and porterage, and a nomad, or hunting section, living by fowling and the sale of jungle-produce. The same distinctions are found in some form or other among the great fishing castes of the Ganges valley, above the Delta. It seems probable that these all s|)ring from some K61 tribe of the north Vindhya, which spread from the hills down the rivers. A great number of the fisherman are returned at the Census under the general title of Mallah, which, being Arabic, must have been conferred upon them at a comparatively recent date. Its subdivisions include many who are else- where returned under what are usually considered to be distinctive caste titles, such as Tiyar, Malo, KCvat and the like, with their endless subsections. One of the castes thus split up, the Patni, appears to be of a north-Gangetic origin, possibly descended from some sub-Himalayan tribe like the DOm. The Malo, also found principally in north Bihar, holds an almost equally low position. The Tiyar comes between the Malo and the Jaliya Kaibartta. The Kevat in Oudh and Bihar, though probably of the same Vindhyan origin as the Malo and Tiyar, is largely engaged in cultivation, and takes his stand, accordingly, above the sections of the caste which carry loads or engage in domestic service, as well as above those who still live on the river. In the Central Provinces, the Kcvat has not abandoned the traditional occupation, and is found mainly along the Mahanadi and its affluents. There is a colony of this caste in east Bengal, where, however, they do not catch fish but buy up and re- tail the haul of the Kaibartta, whom they therefore consider their inferiors. Above the tract occupied by these castes, the Kahar, or Dhimar, is by far the most important of the group, and with it comes the Jhinvar of the Panjab, still higher in position. All these are closely connected both by rank and functions. The latter are numerous and varied. The Kahar or Jhinvar is a valuable member of the permanent village staff, and receives his share of the crops. Though low in relative rank he is pure, to the extent that he can bear water to all, and enter all but the inner pene- tralia of their houses. Indeed, in parts of Hindustan, one of the subdivi- sions is called Mahra, because he is allowed inside even the women's apartments in the execution of his domestic duties. The Kahar is often a cultivator in the east, but to the west, he fishes, sinks wells, makes Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 69 baskets, carries burdens and above all, provides the water for the re- freshment of the peasant in the field. He has a special branch of culti- vation under him, to wit, the growth of water-nuts (trapa bispinosa), in the village tanks. His wife, too, as has been mentioned above, is, the midwife of the Jat and Rajput. The l^Iachi is the counterpart of the Jhinvar in the west of the Panjab and performs the same duties, with the e.xception of carrj-ing burdens, the shoulder-pole and palki not being customary in those parts. There is also a keen demand for his services as village cook, because in the hot weather the village usually gets its meals from a common kitchen or oven. Down the Indus, however, and on the west coast, the IMachi is a fisherman only, and the same may be said of the Mo ha no, a lower caste of the Sindh waters, which is probably an occupational body. In the Telugu country, the Boya, mentioned above, is probably akin to the Irulan, a wild, roving tribe of hunters and haunters of the scrub- jungle of the lower hills. The more prevalent fishing caste is the Palle, which is said to be a branch of the great labouring caste of PaUi, further south and included in it. The latter was once subdivided into the Mina, or fishing, and the Vana, or settled, clans, but apart from the barrier of a different language, the dividing line of occupation now leads the field- worker to repudiate the fisher, and not to eat or intermarry with him. Another Telugu caste, the Besta, is, like the rest, both fisher and cook, and some of its members hold land. They are supposed to be connected with the Karnatic Kabbera, or Ambiga, who, in turn, form a link with the coast castes of the Mogcr and INIukkuvan, which go to sea, and the IMugayan, which fish only in the river. There is a similar distinction between the Tamil caste of the S'embailavan and their subdivision the S'avajaikkaran, the seafarers being reputed to rank higher than the freshwater people. The S'embadavan call in the local Brahman, and the I\Ioger make use of the Havika, but the rest do not trouble the priest of any community other than their own. ij 46. Stone, Salt and Lime-workers (2,043,600). These may be taken as subsidiary to the fishing castes, since in many parts of the country the latter have been compelled to take to such means of livelihood, whilst some of the castes specially devoted to these trades are also connected by descent with the fishers. The Kevat, for instance, in its lower sections, is merged into the Bind, and the Bind, in turn, touches the Cain and the Goiirhi, some of whom are returned as sections of the Mallah. The majority of all these castes, however, are field-labourers, stone-workers and lime or salpetre makers, in addition to the fishing or boating sections. Some of the trades have become the attribute of a caste, as the Luniya, Rehgar, Soregar, originally functional bodies. The Luniya, or Nijniya, is the nearest to a real caste, but it is not yet organised on the normal lines. It repudiates, however the Cain, though probably, their origin is identical. The latter, in the southern parts of the upper Ganges valley, has but a poor reputation, not entirely undeserved, for frequenting places of pilgrimage, with the object of cutting the knots in waistcloths which in India serve the purpose of a pocket. North of this tract, however, the Cain ranks low, though with untainted reputation. The Bind, too, stands higher in rank in the west than in Bihar, whether he fishes or labours in the fields. On the west coast there are two bodies of salt-workers now driven to other trades. The Kharvi of Gujarat are sailors and tile-turners, ori- 70 5- Ethnography. ginally belonging apparently to the Kharol or Rchgar of Rajputana, who still, like the Agria, are in a position to keep up their eponymous trade, both on the coast and by the Sambhar lake. Further south, the Patharvat, now a separate caste, is an offshoot, it is thought, from the Uppara of Kanara, and are stonc-workcrs, the rest of the community being earth-workers and carriers by bullock; whilst the Uppiliyan and Kaduppattan, originally of the same trade, have added the profession of hedge-schoolkceping to their means of subsistence. The Agria, a Rajpu- tana caste, still finds room for its traditional making of salt along the Bombay coast, and to a minor extent in south east Panjab and in the Agra Province, which, according to some, derives its name from the saline character of the soil. Where this caste is in force it ranks with the lower grade of cultivators. In some parts the Agria is held to be a subdivision of the Luniya, but there seems reason to think that it is a distinct caste. The Cunari, or lime-burner and the SOri-gar saltpetre-maker, on the other hand, where they are not separate castes, belong to a branch of the salt-workers. In Bengal, however, the Haiti, which burns shells into lime, ranks among the impure, though the product of their labours does not pollute those who make use of it. § 47. Toddy-drawers (4,765,400). Between the lower artisans and the field-labourers may be taken the castes which live by tapping the palm for its juice, in some parts of India a body of numerical importance. They occupy but a low position, partly by reason of their origin^ partly again because the toddy they provide is often kept till fermented, and being thus an intoxicant, is relegated to the impure articles of con- sumption. This is the case still more markedly with the distilling castes, which are classed among the urban and dealt with separately. Along the coasts the coco and palmyra abound, and the date flourishes in Telingana and the Gangetic valley. It is here, therefore, that these castes are in greatest strength. In lower Bengal and on the Gujarat coast, though the material in question is abundant, it is the custom of the cultivators to tap their own trees or to employ the ordinary field-labourer or lower village menial to do the work for them. The tree-tapping castes, too, even where there is the greatest field for their labour, are largely engaged in cultivation, either as landholders or labourers. The chief caste of this description in the Ganges valley is the Pasi, a name derived from a noose, probably in reference to the belt by means of which the palm is climbed, or, where the caste is addicted to wandering in the jungle for hunting purposes, from the snare then used. In Oudh, where the Pasi has a bad reputation, the noose in question used to be identified with that used by the Thag in strangling their victims. The Pasi is probably of very early pre-Aryan origin emanating from the Vindhya, and akin to the Arakh and Khatik castes, now differentiated by occupation. In Bihar it ranks with the Bind or Cain, already mentioned as low fishing or boating castes, but in the west, it takes a lower place. The Bhanijari, of the west coast, which is not to be confused with the Barber caste of Orissa, ad- heres more closely to its traditional calling, probably because its oppor- tunities are greater, and the "toddy-habit" is more extensively established in the tract where it resides. Its members cultivate also to some extent, since restrictions upon the extraction of toddy were imposed by the govern- ment. They also distill spirit from forest produce and sugar in the State distilleries. Further down the coast, the Bhandari is replaced by two similarly Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 71 localised castes following the same trade, the Paik and the Billava. Both names are derived from the military services rendered to the Tulu chiefs by the ancestry of the communities in question. The Paik were the infantry, and on the strength of the tradition, some of them now claim to be Ksatriya, substituting the sub-title of Namdhar, for that of Haje, or old, Paik. By some, however, their name is derived from Pal, the spirit worshipped by tree-tapping castes. There are probably as many cultivators among them in the present day as tree-tappers. They speak Kanarese, whereas the Billava, further to the south, are a Tulu caste, and, share, moreover, the customs of Malabar in religion and ceremonial, employing their own priests, where the Paik call in the Satani, an upland caste. The name Billava means archer, corresponding to the Dhanuk a labouring caste of upper India, the Kandra of Orissa, and the Cavada, a Gurjara Rajput clan. The south of the Peninsula is occupied by three large tree- tapping bodies, probably connected with each other in origin. The name II a van, which is now used to designate one only of the three, was once applied to all. It means a native of Ceylon, and the Tiyan, who are sometimes called by it in south IMalabar, also derive their name from dvipa, an island, and claim to have come from the south. Furthermore, they address each other by the name of S'enan, which apparently corres- ponds with S'anan, the tree-tapping caste of the south-east. They are divided, like the Nayar, into two distinct bodies, the northerners and the south-lMalabar Tiyan. The northerners are wealthier, better educated and more enterprising than the others, and have managed to get some of their community into good posts under the Government. The southerners are poor, illiterate, and more closely connected with their traditional employment, with field labour as the alternative. Still further south there is a smaller body, the Tandan, probably a sub-caste of the Tiyan, but not intermarrying with them. This caste has the curious custom mentioned in connection with the Nayar, of prohibiting its women from crossing a certain river. As those on the south are far better off than their kinsfolk on the other side, this restriction may have a solid mundane basis. The third of these castes, the S'anan, is found principally in Tinnevelli and Madura, though it is spread to some extent over most of the Tamil district. The title is not found in the early Tamil dictionaries, and in the inscrip- tions of the loth century the caste is called Iluvan. The name S'anan is said to be derived from san and nar, signifying a span-long noose, thereby corresponding to the name of the Pasi of upper India. The caste came into great prominence in 1899, when it asserted by force its right to enter the temples of the Maravan caste, on the score of its K.satriya origin, a title rejected by the rest of the community. The occupation of the caste is undoubtedly of great antiquity in southern India, and the Kadamba dynasty of Mysore sprang from one of its subdivisions. Numbers of the caste, therefore, were employed in its army and afterwards settled as a semi military peasantry or labouring class upon the land occupied. The tradition of such an origin, however, has not survived amongst the S'anan, whose claims are of comparatively recent date. Curiously enough, the only sympathisers with the claim, outside those who put it forward, are the Christian converts from the caste. The general position of the S'anan in society is that of the lower field labourer, just above that of the menial class. In former years, indeed, it appears that the S'anan, like the weavers, were prohibited from living within the village site. In the Telugu country 72 5- Ethnography. and the Coromandel coast the tree-tapping castes are fairly strong. The 1(1 ig a, which is the principal body amongst them, is an offshoot of the great Balija class, with whom it still sits down to meals. The sejiaration seems to have taken place on functional considerations, though the I'.liga eschew si)irituous lifjuor and employ Brahmans of good position. They pay special homage, however, to the goddess of toddy and intoxicants generally. It is sometimes returned as Indra, but the derivation of Ii.liga, from the verb to extract or draw, like that from the climbing-loop in other cases, seems to indicate the more ai)])ropriate title. The GamaUa, or Gaunclla caste is also one of the same locality, and has century, but the caste now so called is referred to in contemporary records under the name of Pulayan, still used of the corresponding community on the Malabar coast. Some weight may also be attached to the similarity of these two names with those of the PaHi and PaUan, labouring castes of the south Tamil country. The Holar or Holeya of the Karnatic, too, appears to belong to the same group, as in Kanarese the Tamil P becomes H. The PalU, to whom the name of Vanniyan w-as given by the Brahmans. were once a dominant tribe under the Pallava dynasty, but were reduced to predial servitude when the Vellalan entered their country. They are now mainly agricultural labourers, though some have acquired land of their own and others engage in trade. They occasionally call in Brahmans for their rites. Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 75 but their customs and rules are for the most part purely Dravidian. On the score of their former position, they have of late put forward the claim to be considered K.satriya, and don the sacred thread, conduct which brings them into collision with both priest and peasant. It is said that in the Right and Left-hand distribution of castes in the Tamil country, the men of the Palji go to one side and the women to the other, conjugal relations being suspended whilst the facti(ms are in active opposition and resumed when peace is temporarily restored. The PaUan, in spite of the similarity of the name, own to no connection with the PaMi in the present day, and occupy a tract to the south of the latter. They arc lower in rank and rarely engage in pursuits other than field labour. The names of their subdivisions, however, indicate that they may have belonged to the great Kurumban tribe and thus have an ancestral connection with the Pallava and therefore with the Palli. They follow the regular demonolatrous worship of the older Dravidians, and if they use priests from outside, they call in the Yelluva, a low caste ministrant. The Pulayan, mentioned above, is a labouring caste of north Malabar, called Ccruman in the southern portion of that tract. They have a traditiim of better, even dominant, days, before the Nayar enslaved them on their estates. One of the relics of their servile condition is the practice of still bringing their children to be named by their employer. They use their own priests in the propitiation of the evilly-disposed goddesses they worship. In a good many respects they follow the customs of the Nayar, such as inheritance through the female line in the north and through the male in the south. The title of Ceruman denotes, according to their tradition, an origin in the Cera country. There remains the great community of village menials of a type more pronouncedly impure than the castes mentioned above. These rank above the tanners and leather workers generally, and above the scavenger, whether a separate caste or, as in the greater part of the south, a sub- division of the main body. The best known section of this group is the Paraiyan or Pariah, of the Tamil country. In treating of it it is advisable at the outset to get rid of the notion set on foot by the Abbe Raynal, that the Pariah is an "outcaste", or that there exists such a thing as an outcaste anywhere in India. Every community has its place, disputed though it may be, in the social hierarchy of Brahmanism, and there is no caste but will unhesitatingly designate some other as ranking below it. Ethno- graphic inquiry, therefore, past and present, has never yet succeeded in touching the bottom, or in finding a waif for whom no recognised place exists within the fold, albeit without the village. Possibly, in the course of time, public opinion may crystallise round one of the nomad castes, who know nothing of their past, and recruit and eat as circumstances dictate. Meanwhile, the scavenger fills this situation in the village life with which this review is at present concerned. Now, the Paraiyan is a caste the position of which is at all events clearly defined, and it has a past which it cherishes. Low as he is, excluded from everyday communion with those above him, "le morne Chandal" will no more admit the pol- luting presence of a Brahman into his hamlet than the latter will allow the Paraiyan's shadow to fall upon his water-pot. Some of the most celebrated and exclusive temples are thrown open to the Paraiyan on certain days of the year, and for the time he lords it over the Brahman. At certain festivals again, especially those connected with S'iva or a local goddess, it is one of this caste who takes his seat alongside of the image 76 5- Ethnocraphv. in the procession, or ties the symbolic marriage-thread round its neck. Until recently, when the custom began to wane, even the Brahman, in a few tracts, had to obtain the formal consent of the Paraiyan to a marriage in his household, and similar acts have been mentioned in connection with the rites of castes dealt with in a preceding paragraph. In another direction, certain low but responsible offices on the village staff must be filled by Paraiyan, and when there is a dispute about a boundary, it is a Paraiyan, or," in other parts of India, a member of the corresponding caste, who has to walk the line with a pot of water, his own son, or a clod of his native earth, on his head. All this tends, of course,- to show that the caste was once a most important element in the population, older on the soil, in closer communion with the genius loci, and influential beyond the con- ception of those who only know it in its condition today. As before pointed out, its present name is comparatively modern, and in the earliest records available, before even the I'ulayan are mentioned, the caste which, like the Paraiyan of to day, was excluded from the villages, was called Eyinan, and credited with the possession of hillforts and considerable power, on the lines of the Dasyu of the Sukta period. The sub-castes of the Paraiyan, which are very numerous, indicate the practice of most of the more re- putable handicrafts, but the general tradition among the modern Paraiyan is that the caste was formerly a weaving one by calling, and in an in- scription of the nth century, probably the earliest in which the name Paraiyan is used, it is subdivided into the weaving and the ploughing sections. Some have derived the name from parai, a drum, and a section does, indeed, act as the drummers of the Right-hand. On the other hand, their great rivals, the leather-workers, blow the trumpet for the Left, without being named after their performance on that blatant instrument. In the Karnatic, the Holeya occupy almost the same position, except that they are not, of course, affiliated to any factional distribution of other castes, nor do they weave to any great extent. A good many of them have, however, joined the Lihgayats, in which community weavers abound, some of them holding but a low position, attributable probably to their origin amongst such classes as the Holeya, and entailing, at all events, the establishment of a special section for their reception. In the Telugu country, the place of the Paraiyan is taken by the Mala class, the name of which resembles that of the Mahar of the Dekkan, which performs the same offices. In the case of the latter, however, the weaving branch has split off into an entirely separate body, whereas in the east it seems to remain as a subdivision. All these Dravidian labouring castes employ barbers, washermen and generally priests, of their own community. Ethnologically, the group presents features of very great interest and importance in re- spect to its origin and history, and much remains to be done in sifting the different strata of a people of whom so little is known in comparison with what has been ascertained concerning the servile classes in upper India. Not that there is any lack of theory, conjecture and analogy. Two castes of western India may be here mentioned, which arc de- dicated generally to the same functions as most of the castes just reviewed. One of them, indeed, the Mahar of the Dekkan, is probably allied, as stated above, to the INIala of Telingana. The distinction, however, in these tracts between the depressed castes and the rest of the village com- munity is more definite than in the south, partly, no doubt, because racial differences are greater or have been less obscured by time. The Mahar, Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 77 for instance, belongs to a far earlier race than the Maratha peasantry, and enjoys a notable prestige amongst them for knowledge of the boun- daries, and for influence with the goddesses of cholera and small-pox. The caste, too, has its own priests, but near the larger towns as often or not a Dcs'asth or local Brahman is called in. This is, however, a modern practice, introduced since the labour market on railways and large public works brought grist to the INIahar mill. Formerly, and perhaps even now in some tracts, the Mahar had to wait for a ceremony amongst the higher castes, and then bring his own party up to just beyond the prohibited range, so that the sacred texts could be heard, with the fiction of the impure listener being out of earshot. The Mahar is as a rule, a labourer, and those who take to trades separate themselves from their fellows. The caste, like the Paraiyan, holds a low but important and useful place in the village staff, and receives shares of all the main crops, and, in some places, a considerable piece of the land. The Dhci.l caste of Gujarat, on the other hand, is not one of the recognised community of the village, except in the south, and even there he is not regarded as one of the old stock, and has no special knowledge of the boundaries or of the idiosyncracies of the local gods. In fact, he is apparently what he claims to be, an immigrant against his will from Rajputana, though the tradition of the movement is no longer definitely retained. In the north of the province, the menial work of the village is done chiefly by the Bharigi, a lower caste, and the Dhed was until recently, a weaver of coarse cotton goods. When factories were established in Bombay and the chief towns of Gujarat the Dhed lost much of his custom, and took to working under the new regime at the machine-made article, whilst others took to day labour. North of the Narbada, the families of this caste are often found attached to the estates of the larger Kanbi or Rajput landholders, by whom they are supported. In the south a special sub-caste has been formed of those who have taken to domestic service with Europeans, here again following the same lines as the Paraiyan. Either on account of this adaptability or because of the thrift displayed by the caste in its various callings, the Dhed is credited in a local proverb with having profited above others by British rule, and to have waxed fat and kicked accordingly against his Brahmanic betters. Though the caste employs only low caste priests it is credited with great orthodoxy and assiduity in its religious duties, as well as with strict- ness in the observance of the rules of the caste, enforced by local councils. § 50. Leather-workers (15,028,300). This group, as was stated above, cannot be well distinguished from that which precedes it. It is the function of all the impure castes to deal with dead cattle, even if it be only to skin and to drag the carcasses away for burial. But there are grades and privileges involved. Some touch no bodies but those of the cloven-footed animal ; others draw the line at cattle, and leave sheep and goats to their inferiors. Usually the hide is the perquisite of the menial, who, moreover, is not forbidden to indulge in the flesh after flaying. Indeed, when the market for leather is brisk, or when dissension is rife between the peasantry and the village menials, mortality amongst the cattle is apt to increase materially, and sometimes with a suddenness which attracts the judicial attention of the local authorities, and leads to the discovery in the thatch of the servile hamlet of the materials for an extensive study of rural toxicology. But though the castes in question remove the hides, it is only special sections of them which tan or curry them, and these, jg 5. Ethnography. except in the north, arc generally split off into a separate caste. Further- more, the families which take exclusively to leather-work as their pro- fession beyond the simple requirements of the cart, plough or water-lift, usually rise to a position superior to that of the tanner or currier, and ultimately, especially in towns, hold themselves aloof from the rest. On the other hand, where the caste furnishes virtually the whole labour supply of the village, the tanning branch sinks below those which only labour in the fields. In the latter capacity, the caste has to do whatever they are bid by the peasantry — within, of course, the strict bounds of tradition. They may never, however, take up their residence in the village or pass anything directly from their own hand to that of one of higher caste. It is a noteworthy fact that with centuries of such degradation piled upon them, the women of this class should be renowned for their good looks; so much so, that special arrangements seem to have been thought neces- sary by the Brahmanic organisers of society to meet the results of intrigues and illicit connections between them and men of the upper classes. To this day men turned out of their caste on this account find refuge in some recognised mixed body, whilst the offspring of such mesalliances go to form the "fair-skinned Camar", the subject of more than one pro- verbial admonition on the country side. There is the possibility, of course, that in the very north of India some of the helot classes may be descended from early foreign races who were overwhelmed by subsequent invaders and reduced to servitude, but throughout the rest of the country these classes are now generally held to represent the Dasyu or darker tribes, displaced by the Arya and Scythian invader north of the Vindhya, and by similar movements amongst Dravidian races and others, in the south and the great delta of the east. The great Camar caste is found all over the country except in the south, but in the tract where it is most numerous, between the east Panjab and Bihar, it is not exclusively a leather-working caste as its name de- notes. It supplies, as just pointed out, the main body of field labour, and receives its share of the harvest like the other village menials on the establishment. In this capacity, the Camar community is generally organised into distinct sections, irrespective of social subdivisions. Some work for individual patrons, but more often each is assigned to a certain association of landholders. The development of the leather industries upon European lines in some of the large towns of the north, such as Cawnpore and Agra, has attracted a large number of Camar away from their native haunts. Indeed, the demand for labourers along the railways and in the chief commercial centres of upper India is said to have had the effect of depleting to a considerable extent the supply available for the village field operations, and the Camar, like the Dhcd of Gujarat, leaves home when he pleases, and returns with a full pocket and something of a "swelled head". In parts of Rajputana and the southern Panjab, the Camar docs the coarse weaving undertaken further cast by the Kori. The caste is subdivided minutely by function, locality and traditions as to origin, into endless endogamous sections, in a recognised order of precedence, and all under the regulation of a caste-Council which is said to be strict in its enforcement of ceremonial rules. In the central and eastern Panjab a good many of the Camar are Sikhs by religion, though of course they occupy a position different from that of the Jat. Comparatively few seem, from the Census, to have embraced Islam, but this is due to the use of the title of Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 79 MOci by converts, especially in the west of the Panjab, where they are nearly ail Muslim. In other parts of India, the MOcf is the subdivision, generally en- tirely distinct, which is engaged in shoemaking, usually in the larger towns. Even in the west Panjab the Camar or Moci do not perform the same duties in the village as the Camar of the east, but only do the leather-work and tanning, thereby taking a higher position than their agricultural fellow. The Camar of other Provinces is a Brahmanist in his faith, of much the same order as the lower masses of the population of the locality. In some parts he gets Brahmans of a low grade to serve him, but, as a rule, they are only called in to nominate the most auspicious day for important domestic cere- monies. By reason of the connection of the caste with the exuviae of dead cattle, the Camar is held to be lower in rank than even the Brahmanised section of a converted forest tribe which has abandoned the cruder elements of its daily diet. It does not appear, however, that this was always the case, as leather entered into the clothing of the early Vedic communities long be- fore they could have reduced the Dasyu to servitude, so that the task of tanning and preparation must have been performed by members of their own race. The degrading character of the occupation, therefore, may have been imputed to it by the Brahmanic censors of the new regime when it was established upon priestly initiative at a later date. In the lower Himalayan valleys of the Panjab there is the Mcgh caste, who perform much the same duties as the Camar of the plains, but are rather higher in social esteem because they are largely weavers, and leave the dirtier offices of the village to lower castes, such as the Koli and Dagi. The latter do the leather work in some parts, but elsewhere they put it on to the Koli or Canal. All are of about the same class as the Camar, some even being subdivided under that title, and represent the earlier tribes of the locality, reduced to servitude by the later comers from the south or west. They resemble the lowest castes of the plains, too, in acting as pipers and drummers at village processions. South and west of the Vindhya, the caste is still known by the names of Cambhar, or Khalpo, but is quite unconnected with the northern communities of the former name. The leather work, too, is detached, more or less, from the menial offices, and is not intimately bound up with the village staff. In the Dekkan and Telugu country, the Camar gives place to the Maiig or Madiga, both of which names are apparently derived from Matafigf, the caste goddess, a synonym of Kali. The JMadiga takes a prominent part in the festivals of the S'akti worshippers, probably of Dravidian origin incorporated into the Brahmanic pantheon as circumstances demanded. From this as well as from the part it plays in the marriage ceremonies of some of the higher castes, it may be inferred that the caste is one of the earliest of the uplands, and thus more likely to propitiate the local gods than the more reputable but more recent arrivals now in occupation. Both Maiig and Madiga employ their own priests, Garuda or Dasari. Where the Maiig is found alongside of the Mahar in the Dekkan there is always rivalry and occasionally strife, but the Mahar takes precedence of the other in the village. In the Tamil country the principal leather-working caste is the S'akkiliyan, vulgarised by Europeans into Chuckler. It is an immigrant body, as several of its subdivisions bear Telugu or Kanarese titles, and many of its members still use those vernaculars. It may be added, too, that its name does not occur in any of the older inscriptions in Tamil. It is probably, therefore, an offshoot of the Madiga, moved south. So 5. Ethnography. importing with it its traditional rivalry with the village serf, for there is constant bickering between the S'akkiliyan and the Paraiyan, public opinion being in favour of the labourer, as in the Dekkan. It may also be noted that the leather-workers are here, as in the north, remarkable for the beauty of their women, and in those stages of Sakti worship at which the presence of a living representative of the Female Energy is necessary, a S'akkiliyan girl is always selected for the part. It is only the simpler leather work, as was mentioned above, that is done by the village Camar, and though he can cobble shoes, he does not generally make any but the roughest kinds. The MOci takes up the higher branches of the craft, but in Bengal, as in the west Panjab, this caste does a good deal of the village labour, and in the former tract his shoes are said to be inferior to those of the Camar of Bihar. In Rajputana the Bambhi seems to be the shocmaking branch of the latter, and in 1S91 some 207,000 of them were returned, but as in 1901 they were reduced to lioo, it is probable that the rest are included in the main Camar caste. In several parts of India, the Moci of the towns are divided into functional sub-castes, such as that of saddlers, embroiderers of saddle-cloths, makers of leather buckets for ghl (clarified butter), of spangles, shields and scabbards, rising in rank as their calling entails greater skill or more costly materials, always tending towards endogamy within the craft. § 51. Watchmen (3.639,900). There are few countries, possibly none, in which the old counsel to set a thief to catch a thief has been more widely and conscientiously put into practice than in India. In the case of more than one of the castes already passed under review it has been pointed out that a portion of the community in question was avowedly detached for night work of one sort in order to counteract the enterprise of its comrades in simultaneous operations of another. In several of the older lists of the castes of a locality, too, there may be found opposite a title, the terse description, "Thieves and watchmen". The combination is obviously appropriate in tracts interspersed with hills and forests, or containing the broken ground, frequent in India, in which the facilities of both functionaries for evading observation are united: or, again, where tribes of hunting and fowling propensities have settled down to village life. But even in the open and well-cultivated plains the need of a night- watch over cattle, grain and other movable property is generally recognised, although the underlying notion of blackmail may be absent. In the latter case, however, the duty is performed by a local caste in which it is not the traditional or even the principal mode of getting a living. It tends, however, like all else in India, to become hereditary in the families which take to it, and, if associated with a recognised dole out of the harvest, to be ultimately crystallised into a sub-caste. This seems to have been the case with the Dhanuk of the Ganges valley, though the branch of the caste which has found its way into the eastern Panjab is treated as criminal without the saving grace of occasional watchmanship. The Mahar of the Dekkan, again, has recognised subdivisions of watchmen and the guardians of the village gate. There are also castes which are traditionally watchmen without any association with the predatory classes. Among these are the Barvala and Batval, of the lower Himalayan valleys of the Panjab, who, though chiefly watchmen and messengers, also perform many of the menial offices which in the plains are left to the Camar, but draw the line at dealing with skins and leather. They are not allowed however. Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 8i to reside within the village site, and in this respect are on the level of the Mahar. The Ghatval of Bihar, again, has become a separate caste in consequence of its having appropriated to itself the guardianship of the low passes through the hills, and has a share in the general name of JNIallah. But it is most probably an offshoot of that wide-spread and incoherent tribe known as the Bhuiya. The Kandra of Orissa derive their name, like the Dhanuk, from their prowess in archery, and in former days constituted a local militia in conjunction with the Panka. They are now watchmen and labourers, keeping up much of their old religion and customs, but cmjjloying Brahmans on occasions. In the Dravidian country, the Ambalakkaran of the south-ca.stern Tamil districts, have risen by the adoption of Brahmanic rules from a hunting caste to an cstalilished village position as watchmen and cultivators. Their kinsfolk, the Mut- tiriyan, are said to have passed through a militia stage before settling down to the guardianship of the village. They are affiliated by some to the ;\Iutraca, a larger caste once no doubt the guards of the frontier of the Vijayanagara dominions, and it is possible that the military traditions of the Muttiriyan are due to this relationship. The Wutraca, however, are from the Telugu country, and the connection therefore may be no more than is suggested by similarity of name. There remain the castes which are constituted watchmen more from apprehension than from an a priori confidence in their efficiency. Amongst these maybe counted the Khangar of Bundclkhand, now numerically insigni- ficant, and subdivided into a cultivating and respectable section, and one which furnishes watchmen and labourers to the villages. It is no doubt one of the early Vindhyan tribes a portion of which has been Brahmanised by enlist- ment into local forces and contact with the Rajputs by whom the tribe was dispossessed of its hill-strongholds. The upper section has no social inter- course with the watchmen. The latter retains its old customs and religion, does not employ Brahmans, and, although not one of the regular criminal tribes, is sufficiently prone to petty theft and burglary to make its enlist- ment as Kotval or watchman, advisable. In some cases it is returned at the Census under this name, but it is totally unconnected with the watchman caste of Bardvan, in Bengal, or that of the west, which is Bhil, or of the Central Provinces, which is Gond. A more important community of this class is the i\Iina of Rajputana, to which reference was made in connection with the Meo, the Muslim and more settled branch of the same tribe. The Mina are spread all over the east and north of Rajputana, and were formerly the rulers of a considerable portion of the present state of Jaipur, if not of Alvar and Bhartpur also. Even now, they occupy a dominant position amongst the agriculturists of the east, and in Jaipur, a section is employed as the special guardians of the palace and State treasure. It used to be the custom, moreover, for a Mina to complete the enthrone- ment ceremonial of the Chief of Jaipur by affixing upon his forehead the mark of his caste, just as in Mevad, the Chief has to undergo the same operation at the hands of a Bhil, in token of the acquiescence of the former owners of the soil in the new order of things. There is no doubt that the Mina are of early and pre-.Aryan origin, though a section of them has been impregnated by Rajput blood to an extent w'hich encourages them to claim to belong to that order. Of the two sections into which the tribe is divided, the Caukidari, or watchmen, used to be the terror of Central India, and carried its raids far south of the Vindhya. As it still IndoAryan Restarch. IL j. 6 82 5- Ethnography. exercises its traditional functions of guarding the villages, it considers itself higher in rank than the other sub-division, the Zamindari, which has settled down to cultivation, and it used to take its brides from the latter without returning them. Now, however, the cultivator has advanced in prosperity and refuses to recognise the older section either as its superior or even as its equal. In this it was supported by a former Chief of Alvar, who did his best to sever the more reputable of his subjects from the contaminating influence of their turbulent fellow-tribesmen. In the south of Rajputana the Mina hold a lower position than up north, and in Marvad some rank as village menials of. the impure grade. In the neighbourhood of the hill tracts they are also hunters and fowlers, and everywhere their reputation is the basis of their employment on the vil- lage staff. Almost the same can be said of the Bhil, who, in Gujarat, serves as watchman, under the sub-title of Vasavo, a name applied to his tribe in the western Satpura. In Bihar and along the Ganges as far up as Mirzapur, the large caste of the Dosadh undertakes the duties of watchman. This community is very mixed. It has undoubtedly a strong strain of Mongoloidic blood, but it is peculiar in the extent of its formal recognition of members of higher castes who seek admission to its ranks. It employs degraded Brahmans for ordinary purposes, but at the chief festival of the caste, that in honour of Rahu, the demon of eclipse, one of its own number officiates. The Dosadh used to furnish many re- cruits to the Muslim armies of Bengal, and it is said that a considerable proportion of Clive's army at Plassey was composed of this caste. Now, however, the Dosadh has but a poor reputation for industry-, whilst it is much addicted to crimes against property, entailing its employment as watchmen. The rest of the caste get their living by porterage and day labour. The Mai of western Bengal is largely engaged to watch crops and villages, as many of its sections are thieves and wandering pilferers. It belongs to a large and widely-spread Dravidian tribe now divided into numerous separate castes. A similar caste to the Dosadh is found in the Bcrad, or Bcdar, 'fearless ones", of the south Dekkan. These were originally hunters and fowlers of the Karnatic, and were formed into militia by the Muslim Chiefs of Mysore and Haidarabad, in which capacity they served till a compara- tively recent period. They are now watchmen and petty cultivators. Their faith is Brahmanic, of the semi-Dravidian type, and they employ the Sa- tani caste as their priests. Possibly they come of the same stock as the Buya, one section of which pursues the same calling, or the Vctjan of the Tamil country, who are still hunters and in the jungle phase of existence. In the Maratha country, especially near the Sahyadri range, the place of the Berad is taken by a kindred tribe, also from the south, known as the Ramosi, a title which is said to represent the Marathi Ranvasi, or forestdweller. They address each other, however, as Boyali, indicating Telingana parentage. They stand higher than the Bedar, and employ by preference, the Jangam priests of the Liiigayat, with a Gosai for their re- ligious and moral instructor. According to the caste reputation, the func- tions of this individual are more necessary than effective. By the age of seven, the Ramosi boy must have stolen something or he is disgraced. If caught and convicted, the halo thereby acquired renders him a prize in the marriage market for which an unusually high dowry has to be of- fered. Another peculiar tenet of this caste is that meat is not to be eaten unless it has been killed by a Muslim. Castes and Caste-Groups. B. The Village community. 83 § 52. Scavenging castes (3,647,700). This group includes the lowest of at all events the village castes of India, whatever may be their position relatively to the immoral and foul-feeding nomad. Yet even here there are gradations of rank duly recognised within the community though not affecting its intercourse with the outside public. For this reason, perhaps, the Bhangi or Mihtar caste of the upper Gangetic region is subdivided to an unusual extent, and the main endogamous sub-castes are strict in regard to the limitation of their respective functions. Judging from the nomenclature of the subdivisions it may be inferred that the caste was originally formed out of a number of local tribes, reduced or compelled to have recourse to occupations repudiated by the community to whom they were subject. Some of these sub-castes draw the line at carrying loads and playing pipes and drums; others have become watchmen, cane- workers, domestic servants, sweepers of roads, and plasterers of walls with cowdung. A section which keeps pigs, again, ranks below all but those who remove night-soil, and amongst these last, those who serve private houses hold no intercourse with those employed on public latrines. It may be borne in mind that these latter functions are confined to towns, except where the women of the household are strictly secluded. Else- where, the custom of the country renders their offices unnecessary. The great differences in the physical appearance of sections of the caste do not indicate a different origin of the respective communities, but a varied recruitment from higher castes of "broken men"; and, also, the impregnation of the sections undertaking domestic service with the blood of their em- ployers through illegitimate connections, the Mihtaranf sharing the repu- tation of the Camari for good looks. She is also called in, like the wives of several of the low castes, to perform duties connected with childbirth which no higher class will undertake. In the west, where there is no question of a lower caste, the Bhangi will handle a corpse, kill a stray dog, and act as hangman. Further east, he finds that these functions can be thrust upon the Dom, a tribe of probably quite as early origin, but later enslavement to Brahmanic supremacy. In the Central Panjab the Cuhra does much the same work that the Camar does where the latter is in full strength, and resents the title of Bhangi. In the west of the province the ^Muslim sweeper known as Kutanan or Musalli, digs graves but will not touch night-soil. Further to the south, the Ciihra is called Jat like many other menial castes. In the east, the caste is a recognised member of the village staff and belongs to the Bhangi community of the Gangetic region. Amongst other duties may be mentioned one of great importance in a land where fuel is scarce, that is, the collection, drying and storing of cowdung for burning. The sweeper, too, is the only caste which will convey the tidings of a death to those whom it may concern. In the Sikh tracts many Ciihra have joined that faith and after conversion continue to perform only the less offensive parts of their traditional du- ties. One of their subdivisions, the Rangreta, has risen in position by taking to leather work exclusively. The Mazhabi, or Mazbi, as the Sikh Cuhra is called, makes a capital soldier, but has to be brigaded in se- parate regiments, as the other Sikhs, with their eye on the traditional calling, refuse to associate with the convert, even in religious ceremonies. Occasionally the Sikh intermarries with the Lai Begi, or Brahmanic Bhangi. In north Gujarat, the Hhahgio is one of the principal village menials, and does most of the unskilled labour. In spite of the Rajput titles of the sub- 84 5- Ethnography. castes, this community is one of long settlement on the land there. It is the Bhangiu, for instance who points out the boundaries; the sight of one of this caste carrying his basket brings luck for the day, and before crossing the Mahl river in a flood, the blessing of a Bhangio tends to a safe passage. In this part of the country, as on the Ganges, the Bhangi is strict in his religious observances, but is only allowed, of course, to worship from the outside court of the temples. As in the north, too, this caste has the provision and control of the village music at times of festival. In Bengal and Assam the chief castes of sweepers are the Bhuinmali and the Harl, or Haddl. Probably both are of the same stock, a Kol or Deltaic tribe of early settlement. The Bhuinmali is found in the north and east of the province, the Hari in the west and centre, and the Haddi in south Orissa. Both arc subdivided into functional sub-castes which do not intermarry. Musicians and porters stand highest, and often take to cultivation. The ^lihtar, borrowing its name from upper India, is the lowest section, and the only one which touches night-soil. Between these come sections working in cane, tapping palms and carrying torches at weddings. One section has taken to private service. The smearing of wet cowdung upon walls is a frequent occupation of the Bhuinmali, but they can only touch the outer walls, and except this caste none will touch the wall of another owner, though each householder does the steps and inner walls of his own dwelling. The Hari has preserved much of the non-.\ryan customs of his original tribe in regard to marriage, and is singular amongst the widow-marrying classes of India in prohibiting instead of encouraging, the marriage of the widow to the younger brother of her late husband. The caste does not, as a rule, call in Brahmans, but the practice of making use of them is spreading round Calcutta, though the Brahmans in (|uestion are put out of communion by their fellows. As the Dravidian country is approached the village scavenging is more and more done by some of the menial castes mentioned in a preceding paragraph, such as the Paraiyan or Mala. It will probably be found that as elsewhere endogamous sub-castes are being formed, separating the sweeping and labouring families from those employed in municipal or private conservancy. § 53. The Dom and Ghasiya. It was remarked above that in the Gangetic region there were functions which even the scavenger caste would not undertake, there being the Dom at hand to perform them. Here, then, is found a caste which, if not at the bottom of the social scale, is, at least, not far from it. It is not, however, a scavenging caste by tradition, nor is it homogeneous. There are Doms and Doms. In the Kumaon and Garhval Himalaya, the Dom lives by agriculture and village handicrafts. Further west, the Panjab Dijmna is often, it is true, the village sweeper, but his ordinary trade is that of cane -work. This last is, in fact, the occupation most widely spread, on the whole, throughout the caste. The Dom is at his lowest in the Bengal Delta, whither the caste is said to have been imjiorted from upper India, to do what no local caste would do. In Bihar and its neighbourhood to the west, the Dom seem to fall into two sections. One settled down to village life, mat-weaving, basket-making, and labour, with a little scavenging thrown in, the other more or less nomad, and containing gangs said to be expert and artistic burglars and thieves. Some stray tribes seem to have penetrated across the Central Belt into the north Telugu country and the Karnatic. In the former they Castes and Caste-Groups. C. Subsidiary Professional Castes. 85 are coarse weavers, and in the Dekkan, acrobats, dancers and bad cha- racters generally. Both these bodies have the appearance of belonging to the Kol-Dravidian race, possibly through the admixture of local blood. In the same way, the Dom of Dacca, long separated from their native country up the Ganges, have acquired characteristics different from those ■of the Dum of Bihar. It is now generally believed that the Dom were settled in force along the southern Himalaya at a very early period, and judging by the forts and strongholds called after them, they were in a dominant position, like the Dasyu encountered by the first Vedic immi- grants. The Dum still on the hills were enslaved by later comers, such as the Khasya and refugee Rajputs and Brahmans. The community is divided into four groujis, field-labourers, weavers, and m.etal-workers; cane-workers and the lower artisans; exorcists, porters and leather-workers, and, finally, musicians, mendicants, and — tailors. The pom of the plains, when settled, tend to establish separate castes of cane-workers (BansphOra, Basor), and labourers. In spite of efforts to get them to work themselves into a better position they seem to have no aspirations beyond their traditional occu- pations or a little petty cultivation. But in social intercourse they disown the nomads. It must be noted that the Diam of the Panjab, whatever their nominal connection with the Dom, are now an entirely separate community, both in occupation and social position. There is a small community called the Ghasiya, which, though pro- bably not connected with the Dom by origin, may be taken with it in view of its kindred position and occupation. It has been held, in Bengal, to be a sub-caste of the Hari, but it appears to be an independent offshoot of some Kol tribe of the Central Belt, and to have been severed from its parent stock at a comparatively recent date. The Ghasiya is still divided into its totemistic exogamous sections, and keeps up the worship of the field goddesses and other genii of its native haunts. In the neighbourhood of the larger Kol tribes the Ghasiya occupy but a low position, and perform on drums and trumpets at festivals with other menial functions. In the plains, however, the Ghasiya have entered private service as grooms and elephant-drivers. The caste keeps much to itself, and, low as it is, it eschews the menial offices imposed upon it in the hills, and especially avoids the leather-worker and contact with dogs. C. Subsidiary Professional Castes. § 54. This comparatively small group comprises a number of bodies which, though not so directly concerned with the every-day life of the masses as those dealt with in the preceding paragraphs, exercise functions which are intimately connected with certain phases of the domestic or reli- gious observances of at least the upper and middle classes of the Brahmanic community in most parts of the country, and stand intermediately, as it were, between the village and the specially urban castes. Bards and Genealogists (782,500). These ancient professions are usually found more or less linked together, and in India the connection is peculiarly intimate. From the earliest times chants in praise of the founders and heroes of the clan have been recited to tickle the ear of the ruling Chief when sitting in formal assembly or heading a procession through his streets. Still more essential were they in battle, to encourage the fighting members of the community to emulate or excel the deeds of 86 5 Ethnography. their ancestors. The annals of such enterprise with the personality' of the principal performers became, naturally, the special study of those whose duty it was to set them to verse and directly connect them with the patrons before whom they have to be recited. The Bard, therefore, developed into a sort of Herald, and as his office, like all others in India, tended to become hereditary, the pedigree of those he served was transmitted in all its ramifications from father to son, with that marvellous accuracy of memory which is marked feature of the Brahmanic intellect. The im- portance of such knowledge can hardly be overrated in a country where the licit and the prohibited degrees of affinity which form the basis of all arrangements of marriage or adoption, are the subject of most minute and complicated regulation throughout the community from top to bottom. In the course of time, therefore, the genealogist more or less split off from the bard, and took the higher rank at Court. His functions are chiefly exercised among the Rajjiuts, but in the Panjab some of the Jat clans, and in Gujarat some of the leading Kanbi families, utilise his services. As a rule, each of the ruling and leading families keeps its own genea- logist. The rest of the community is divided into circuits, assigned re- spectively to a certain member of the fraternity, who annually visits each family in order to learn what domestic occurrences have taken place since his previous visit. In modern times every one of these incidents is entered by him in his register. Such is the reputation of the genealogist for ac- curacy and knowledge that this register is accepted as final in any question of affinity or relationship, and even before such "vahi" were customarv, no Rajput ever thought of disputing the decision of the genealogist upon these points. The principal caste coming under this head is the Bhat, sometimes called Bharot in Gujarat and Rajbhat in Bengal. A question has been raised whether the caste takes its origin from Brahmans who in old days secularised themselves in order to act as Court poets and panegyrists, or whether the function devolved upon a member of the Rajput clan to which the Bhat was attached. There is evidence on both sides. In every tract in which the Bhat is found, the community contains two sections, of which the Brahma Bhat is the higher. In Rajputana, the Brahma, or Birm Bhats are treated as Gaur Brahmans, and in the east ofOudh, that sub-caste of Brahman which is native to the locality, actually performs the duties of bard, and sometimes of genealogist. Again, the person of a Bhat has always been considered inviolable, like that of Brahman. On the other hand, a Brahman is never known to drop his exogamous subdivision by Gotra, whilst the Bhat are subdivided according to Rajput custom. The inviolability of the Bhat, too, may be attributed not only to the character of herald or privileged messenger or forerunner of Chiefs, but to the inexpiable guilt of destroying the only recognised authority upon pedigree, and the apprehension of the vengeance or reprisals that would infallibly follow such an outrage. It is true that the Bhatrazu of the Telugu country are subdivided into the Brahmanical gotra, but this branch of the caste is an exotic, introduced, under the name of Magadha, through Orissa and probably from Bihar, in the course of invasions of the .\ndhra region from the north, and has not kept up cither its traditions or its occupation amongst the once military Dravidian castes to which it was attached. On the other side, there is the fact that the Bhat is a distinctively Rajput institution, and, except for the colonies in Telingana and eastern Bengal, is only found where Rajput influence is supreme. Even in Gujarat, where Castes and Caste-Groups. C. Subsidiary Professional Castes. 87 the Bhats are numerous, all their sections trace their origin to some part of Rajputana, and, as a rule, the Bhats in regular employ dress as Rajputs and have Rajput names. In regard to the distribution of the work of the caste, the Brahma-Bhat usually takes upon himself the duties of poet and reciter whilst the others look after the pedigree. In upper India, too, the former do not take up permanent posts, but are engaged for the occasion. In Rajputana itself, the male Bhat, it is said, undertakes the care of the pedigree of the male line, and his wife that of the female. In these days, the Bhat docs not enjoy by any means the same position as of yore, though a good reciter has still a high value, and in Gujarat, a popular genealogist has considerable influence as counsellor in the households of his clients. Even in the west, however, the Bhat has been obliged to leave his traditional profession to a great extent for trade and cultivation, like the Bhatrazu of the south. In eastern Bengal, where the caste is exotic, it ranks much lower than in upper or western India, though it wears, as elsewhere, the sacred thread. The Bhat there still practises the profession of genealogist, and each member of the fraternity has his circuit which he visits annually. At other times he is in request only in connection with marriage ceremonies, in which he takes the part of herald between the two houses concerned, and acts also as go-between in the preliminary stages of the family arrangement. But in the eastern districts, the Bhat has been reduced even to the trade of making leaf-umbrellas. Some of the Rajputana Bhat accjuire herds of cattle and carry salt, grain and piece-goods to localities remote from the railways. In this respect they fall into line with the Car an, a bard and genea- logist of a lower type, whose range lies between Kach and Rajputana. The name seems to connect the caste with grazing, and it is by cattle- breeding and transport by pack-bullock that the Caran mainly now gets his living. There is an old and long obsolete connection between the Caran and the Kumbhar, or potter caste, the link being said to have been the joint trade of ass-breeding, but the relations have now passed into the stage of violent but unexplained hostility. It is possible, of course, that this misty tradition may account to some extent for the inferior position which the Caran, even when he is exclusively a bard or genealogist, oc- cupies with reference to the Bhat. The Caran caste is subdivided into geographical sections with numerous exogamous sub-sections. The families in permanent employ as genealogists intermarry with each other only, not as a matter of caste, but, as amongst the Jats of the Panjab, on purely social considerations. They have thus acquired a physical appearance far superior to that of the cultivating and cattle-breeding sections of their community. The profession, however, as among the Bhat, has gone down, and only a minority now live by it. Most of the western, or Kach, Caran live by transport on pack-bullocks. Here again their trade has suffered by the extension of railways acrfiss the desert tracts, but many of them have adapted their operations to the new order and ply along the main feeder roads to the chief stations. The Caran who are thus engaged bear a striking resemblance to the Banjara of upper India and the Dekkan in appearance, dress and customs. The Banjara of the north have, in fact, a large subdivision called Caran, and it is possible that there was of old some tribal connection between them and the Caran of the west, lost through the migration of the latter. The Caran shares with the Bhat the reputation of personal inviolability, and numerous cases are on record, extending even down to 1861, of their 88 5- Ethnography. killing one of their girls or old women, or inflicting serious, even fatal, wounds upon their own persons, in order to fix the guilt of certain acts upon those opposed to them. In earlier times, from at least the is'*" cen- tury downwards, both castes were the professional securities for the per- formance of a contract or the repayment of a debt, and no important document of this sort would be accepted as valid without the "dagger" and signature of a Bhat or Caran at the foot of it. This practice arose, ai>i)arently, out of that of obtaining the guarantee or escort of one of these castes for every caravan or transport train from the coast across Central India. But the origin of the notiort of the inviolability of the Caran is as obscure as in the case of the Bhat. The Caran, it is true, has the reputation of being a violent and turbulent character, whose ghost is particularly vindictive and malevolent. The curse of a Caran, therefore, was powerful against one's enemies, and a member of the caste used to be engaged, like Balaam, to accompany the army of the Chief to battle, and curse the foe. The women of the caste, too, are reprehen- sibly familiar with si)ells and charms, and in north Gujarat, the tombs of some of them are worshipped like those of the local goddesses. On the whole, however, the sacredness of the office of an authoritative repository of the family pedigree and achievements seems to be the more probable source of the conception. The only other caste which it is necessary to mention under this head is that of the Dum or Mirasi of the Panjab. The members of this community are both minstrels and genealogists. Their Brahmanic name of Dum may have some relation to the former accomplishment, as the Dom are, as stated in the preceding paragraph, to some extent, musicians. But the Dum as they exist in the present day are far above the Dom alike in appearance, position and attainments, though still amongst the lower classes out of communion with the peasantry and artisans. They are almost all Muslim, and the name of Mirasi is derived from the .Arabic for inheritance and may thus be taken to refer to their work as genealogists. In this capacity they are much below the Bhat, and officiate chiefly in the families of the lower agricultural population and for the impure castes. Some Jat families employ them, but the accredited genealogist for that race, strange to say, is the Sahsi, a criminal vagrant tribe of the province, whilst the families ambitious of a rise in society engage, as above remarked, the Jaga Bhat. The musical attainments of the Mirasi" are considerable. Some only sing, others play the flute, pipe, lute, cymbals and different sorts of drum. Their women also dance and sing occasionally, but only for the delectation, it is said, of patrons of their own sex. Those who are genealogists in permanent employ of a definite circle of clients hold their office hereditarily, and do not associate or intermarry- with those similarly engaged among the impure castes. The profession is by no means un- remunerati\e, especially where agricultural prosperity connotes the neces- sity of an improved family tree. Even in the open market, the Mirasi is a popular and well-paid feature of every fair and large wedding. Unfor- tunately, the Mirasi, like the Bhat in the eastern parts of India, is a shameless blackmailer, and the refusal or inadequate requital of his demand is followed by often witty and invariably outspoken burlesques of the genealogy of the ill-advised recusant. In eastern Bengal, the Bhat, who there resembles the Mirasi rather than his own namesake of Rajputana, is said to varv his stock ridicule of the manners and customs of Europeans Castes and Caste-Groups. C. Subsidiary Professional Castes. 89 with depreciatory references to the ancestry of any local magnate whose purse-strings may have been drawn tt)0 tightly on the Bard's last visitation. § 55. Astrologers and Exorcists (205,300). The impnrtance of the horoscc>i)e, or birth-letter, and of a lucky day and hour for each domestic ceremony is so great in the eyes of the Brahmanic community that the duty of casting the one and of ascertaining the others is usually entrusted to none but a Brahman. In many cases he is maintained by the village for the purpose and remunerated out of the crops, and in most Native States the JyotisI is an honoured official, endowed with salary and estate by the Chief His function does not entail any separation from his sub- caste, so that this class of astrologer does not figure in the census returns. There is, hcnvever, a much lower grade in the profession, called by the same name, or rather, by its popular abbreviation, Josi, who is so returned, chiefly in the upper Gangetic plain and in Central India. He lives by palmistry, exorcism and omen-reading, and accepts remuneration for aver- ting the evil influences of eclipses and of the phases of certain maleficent planets, especially Saturn, and generally pandering to pre-.\ryan credulity. The subdivisions of the caste indicate, too that the Josi is a community of very mixed descent, and if connected at all with the Brahman, is only one of the degraded sections. This seems to be admitted in the case of the Dakaut, the astrologer of the Jamna valley and Rajputana, who is of the Agroha stock, unclassed for taking to an unorthodox course of life. The Ganak, again, of the Brahmaputra valley, are said to have been cast out by their Bengal fellows for undertaking the duties of family- priest to the carpenter caste. The Ganak moved int' large, and it does not appear that they are usually totemistic as a rule, but are named after some peculiarity of the founder. The Rabha is a tribe certainly of Bodu blood but whether a distinct community, allied to the Garo, or merely a branch of the Bodo, alongside of whom it is chiefly found, is not determined. Some have thought that the Rabha was a name given to a half-converted Garo or Kacari, and it is certain that there are Garo who have become Rabha without passing into Brahmanists, just as the Kacari passes into the same community without proceeding to the grade of Koc. The converts constitute a sub-tribe by themselves. On the whole, the Rabha hold themselves to be above the Bodo, but marry girls from the latter. The Bodo, on the other hand, does not marry a Rabha without some purificatory rites. The special dialect of the Rabha is said to be dying out in favour of Assamese, and the people who join the Brahmanists call themselves Koc, so the tribe is on the way to extinction. The Mec live mostly in the Tarai on the west of the Brahmaputra, partly in Assam, partly in Bengal. From their comparatively fair complexion and Mongoloidic features they are affiliated to the Bodo, though they have no tradition of ever having lived out of the Tarai. They intermarried with the Koc Chiefs, a fact which seems to support the theory of Bodo relationship. Towards the west, in Bengal, they are chiefly Brahmanists, and divided into two endogamous sub-tribes, one of which intermarries with the Dhimal, a tribe of different race, possibly Kul or sub-Himalayan Nepali. The Assam Mec have kept up customs much resembling those of the Lalung. A small tribe, akin to the Garo and Bodo, called Hajong, inhabits the southern slopes of the Garo hills, and has made its way into the Surma valley. This descent into the plain appears to have resulted in the formation of two clans, the upper, which remains true to its tribal ways of life, and the Brahmanised community of the valley. The latter have also abandoned their tribal dialect in favour of a corrupt form of Bengali, the others speaking one of the varieties of Garo. Detached from the main body of the Bodo is the Mriing, called Tipparah by the Bengali, and now inhabiting the hills near the little State called by the latter name. A few of them are found in the Surma valley, but most of these are said to be immigrants of quite recent arrival. Formerly the connection between the tribes was closer, as the Chiefs of Kacar and Tipparah intermarried. Now, the only link is that of language, as the bulk of the JMrung are Brahmanised, the Chief claiming to be a Rajput, and the nobles to belong to the Rajbansi order. The tribe is much subdivided, some clans holding an position far above that of the labourers and rude cultivators of the interior. Many of them are much fairer than any of their neighbours, and this, with their Mon- goloidic features and Bodo speech, seems to connect them with the Brahmaputra rather than with the hills of Arakan. Last of the tribes coming within this group is the formerly dominant community of the Ciitiya, which, however, repudiates the connection with the Bodo indicated by their language. They are said in the ancient Assam histories to have come down from the north-east, and to have founded a kingdom in that corner of the valley afterwards expanding southwards into Sibsagar and Nowgong. They came into contact with the Ahom, and were dethroned in 1500. Before that date they were in part Brahmanised, and their com- munity is now divided into the Brahmanic, the Ahom, the Borahi, or pork- Indo-Aryan Research. II. 5. 9 130 5- Ethnography. eaters, and the Dcori, or Levitical body. The two first have been for some time almost completely converted to Brahmanism, and the fourth, though standing out for some generations, has now succumbed, on social considerations, it is said, rather than by religious conviction. The Borahi are a lower class and were the first to fall before the Ahom, who reduced them to a servile condition. They are now apparently almost extinct as a separate community. The Cutiya have lost, along with their religion, their tribal language, which is closely allied to that of the Bodo. They are no doubt of the same origin, but ha.ve long been separated politically as well as geographically, and occupied in upper Assam the same domi- nant position which the Bodo held lower down the river. At present the majority of the Cutiya are found to the south of the Brahmaputra, in Sibsagar, Nowgong, and Lakhimi)ur. The Deori have remained in and about their original seat in the extreme north-east. The princii)al object of their worship is Durga, who was enthroned in place of the numerous evil spirits to whom the tribe paid homage before their conversion. Even now, the services of Brahmans are not called for, and the sacrifices are performed by the Deori and his assistants. The more Mongoloidic appea- rance of the remnants of the Deori clan seem to indicate that they have kept themselves freer from intercourse with the Bodo and Ahom than the rest of the Cutiya. One of their social peculiarities worth mentioning is the habit of lodging a whole family under one roof, enlarging the building as the numbers increase, until sometimes more than a hundred persons are thus sheltered. Their professed Brahmanism sits very lightly upon both priest and layman, and is almost confined indeed to the obser- vance of the initiatory injunction of offering prayers, keeping secret the instructions of the Gosal and paying their annual fee to that functionary. § 93. (b) The Himalayan tribes (48,000). Though few of these, and those not the more important, have descended into British territory, they may be briefly mentioned here owing to some alleged connection between them and the Bodo race, a tie, however, which has long been severed. The Miri is the only tribe which has settled in British territory to any considerable extent. It is found in the Sibsagar and Lakhimpur districts, and seems to be receiving recruits from the hills to the north of the latter and from Darrang. The Miri say that they were invited down by the Ahom Chief at the end of the 1 8th century, in order to help him against the invading Khamti, and settled on the outskirts of the Naga hills, by the Disang. They have preserved their original type in spite of considerable defections from the tribal religion. Brahmanism, however, affects them but superficially, and those who have nominally accepted the guidance of the Gosaf, are now, it is said reverting, because the change of faith has not induced the settled population of the valley to intermarry with them or to accord them any better position than before they paid toll to their spiritual adviser and renounced beef. In any case they do not entrust their principal sacrifices to other than their own tribal priests. They are good cultivators, and their women folk work with them in the field. The Hill Miri, who only visit the plains for the purpose of trading, are much less advanced, and have a somewhat different worship and belief from the others. All the Miri are connected with the Abor, a stronger race, and it is conjectured that it was the pressure of these northern kinsfolk which drove the Miri to the lowlands. It is advisable to note that the name of Miri which means Middlemen in Assamese, is not known to i Castes and Caste-Groups. F. Hill Tribes. 131 the tribe itself, any more than that of Abor is recognised except in the valley. The latter means Independent, and is thus appropriate enough. Both tribes speak of themselves by their clan, without any more general designation. The Abor have not yet settled to any great extent within British territory, but have more than once made raids therein, which resulted in punitive expeditions. Their clans are very numerous, but are remarkable for the unanimity with which they combine into a tribal whole for purposes of resistance or plunder. They used to be keen on the capture of girls and boys, whom they kept as household slaves themselves, and sold for the same purpose to their kinsmen, the Daphla, who live the other side of the Miri, on the west. The Daphla, who call themselves Nyising — the meaning of both terms being unknown — regard the Abor as the leading tribe of their race and the ^liri as poor relations, and all three speak much the same tongue, and to some extent, have the same titles for their sub-tribes. The religions present the same general features, and the .\bor and Daphla have not been reached even by the light touch of the Miri form of Brahmanism. The Aka, a tribe adjacent to the Daphla on the west, though mainly of the old faith, has a few members who are reported to have been converted by one of their Chiefs, who chanced to be com- pelled to serve a certain time in a British jail, where his convictions were modified by a persuasive Gosai. The Aka, though generally thought to belong to the Abor-Miri race, differ considerably from both of these in appearance, and show but little tendency to settle in the lower ranges. On the contrary, they are in close relations with the Tibet authorities on the other side. They are a warlike community, and in addition to their general title which is not used by them, and the meaning of which is un- known, they have two subdivisions, each of which is known to the Assamese by a title implying plunder. § 94. (c) The Khasi and Sainteng (159,500). These tribes belong to the same stock and speak the same language. The former reside in the western portion of the range bearing their name, whilst the Sainteng share with the Lalung the Jaintya portion of the same range. In treating of languages it was pointed out that these two, with two smaller communities of the same tract, appear to be the remnants of a wave of the Mon-speaking race, left stranded by the main body. They have no traditions of any other home, and differ considerably from the surrounding tribes in customs as in speech. The numerous exogamous Khasi clans, for instance, are based upon descent from a female ancestor. Inheritance is in the female line, and the woman is the head of the family. No money or gift passes on marriage, and the young couple do not set up house until a child is born. The religion is the usual propitiation of evil spirits, with a faint and dim notion of a future state in which husband and wife rejoin each other, unless a widow has married again, in which case she belongs to her second. Of late the Khasi have been converted in considerable numbers to Christia- nity, and a few have become Brahmanists. The Sainteng show less dis- position to change. On the other hand, though sharing the religion and customs of the Khasi, they appear to have received a greater admixture of foreign blood, due, it is thought, to the greater accessibility of the Jaintya hills from the plains on the south. The Khasi, again, are divided into petty States or independent groups of villages, each forming a little republic under its own head. In the sister hills, the country' is altogether under the Chief of Jaintya, who appoints twelve local officials to carry on 132 5- Ethnography. the village affairs. The Chief himself is a Brahmanist, but his example, as just mentioned, has not been contagious, and the annual tribal devil- drive, in which every male takes part, is as popular as ever. (5 95. (d) The Mikir (87,300). This tribe inhabits the lower portion of the Khasi range on the north-east and has spread over the plain to the east, up to the Naga hills. The traditions it has regarding its former home are vague and valueless, but it pmbably occupied the low range which goes by its name after leaving the Jaintya hills. From the language, it is supposed to have some affinity to the Naga race, though in habits and appearance it might well be affiliated to the Bodo. The Mikir call themselves Arleng, meaning simply Man, an appellation so common amongst forest tribes that it affords no guide to identification. They are subdivided into several large sections which may, but do not, intermarry. Their chief god is benevolent and powerful, but his subordinates, though theoretically less in authority, arc more active, and generally work mischief. The sacri- fices to them, accordingly, are more frequent. They are conducted by priests who are selected from the elders of the clan, whether men or women. The Mikir are excellent agriculturists in their own line and keen traders in disposing of their crops. They are peculiar amongst their kind in these parts in not congregating in large villages, but in building a few large houses close to their fields. They are great breeders of buffaloes, but, like almost all hill-tribes, K61 or Mongoloid, they abstain from making use of milk. Until recently they had resisted the temptation to embrace Brahmanism, but of late a certain number on the southern limits of their tract have begun, it is said, to observe certain restrictions in diet when out of their own village. Physically, the Mikir stand second to the Bodo and above the rest of the tribes here mentioned. Whatever may be their connection with the Naga or other races, they themselves deny any rela- tionship with their neighbours. § 96. (e) The Naga tribes (i62,Sooj. This name is applied by the outside world of Assam to a collection of tribes occupying a considerable hilly region between Manipur and the south bank of the Brahmaputra. The communities themselves know of no general title, and their tribal designations are seldom those by which they are called by their neighbours. A large amount of information about them has been collected in connection with the Ethnographic Survey, and until this is given to the world, no adequate account of them is available. It is probable that they reached their present locality from two directions. One branch came down from the north-east, whilst a later section doubled back northwards, after having spent some time alongside of the Kuki and other tribes, to the south. The largest tribe, as far as is at present known, is the Angami, called Tengima by its own members. It is settled along the western ranges of the hills, and is one of the communities said to have come from the south. The Tengima reside in unusually large villages, some containing as many as 800 houses. The villages are set upon a hill, and carefully stockaded and guarded against attack. The unit of the tribe is not, however, the village, but a subdivision of the population thus concentrated, called Khel or Tcpfu, exogamous, and said to be derived from a single ancestor. Faction-fights between these bodies are frequent and used to be bloody, as outside aid was called in to take part. The large size of their villages is probably the result of their adoption, apparently from the Manipuri, of the system of permanent cultivation by irrigated channels, carried with extraordinary I Castes and Caste-Groups. F. Hill Tribes. 133 skill and labour round the slojics of the hills. They have the usual vague tribal belief in a supreme god and a future state, though they have not formulated their notions of what happens to the soul when it leaves the body. Their worship is devoted to the propitiation of the spirits of nature, who inhabit pools, trees and rocks, and cause illnesses. The beginning and the end of harvest are celebrated, as in the valley, with elaborate festivals. The Ao Naga tribe came from the north, and is settled to the north-east of the hills. The men are inferior to the Tcngima in physique and in their way of life, but their buildings and villages arc, if anything, superior. Beyond a few special tribal customs, the two tribes have much the same beliefs and practices. The Ao arc really two communities, the Cungli and Mongsen, which speak different dialects and intermarry, each having its own e.xogamous sub-sections. The enslavement of members of neighbouring tribes used to be a regular custom, now, of course more or less suppressed. The victims were treated well, except when paid over as fine or ransom to another village, when they were usually sacrificed. The villages, though nominally governed by a headman, are in practice independent democratic units. The Sema, or Sima, village, on the con- trary, under the adjacent tribe, has a hereditary headman, or Chief, endowed with considerable authority and privileges. This tribe came from the south east, near Kohima, and has occupied a considerable tract round its present settlement. The Sima are more akin to the Tengima than to any other of the local tribes, but are distinguished even among the Naga, for their barbarism and ferocity. They used to prey upon the lands of the Ao, but having been headed off under British control, they are spreading eastwards, over a wilder country'. The Lhota, in contradistinction to the Sima, are a quiet and industrious people, though they adhere to the old method of cultivating on burnt patches of jungle. They manage, neverthe- less, to grow a good deal of cotton, which they convey themselves to the river for sale. In habits they resemble the Rengma, their neighbours. A section of the latter, being evilly entreated by other tribes, sought the lower hills, east of the Mikir, where they alone of all the Naga have taken to something approaching the life of the population of the plains. As to the large number of tribes in this group which live in the interior and south of the hills, little information beyond their titles is at present available. § 97. i^f) The Kuki tribes (200,200). Almost the same remark applies to these, with the exception of the Manipuri and Lu.sei. In tl'.c Kacar hills are found some called the "Old Kuki" (67,200), who were driven north by others of the same race, who, in turn, were being pressed hardly by the Lusci. The principal tribes of the former are the Rangkol and the Bete. They are subdivided into eight social grades, like castes, with the all-important difference that they intermarry with each other and with other tribes. The existence of exogamous clans is probable, but the nomenclature obtained at the Census throws no light upon this point. The Rangkol, and probably the other tribes, worship one chief and several minor deities, and select one t)f their own clan to serve as priest. In Kacar they are beginning to mould their diet upon Brahmanic lines but not so as to interfere materially with their ancestral habits. They differ from the other Kuki in having no Chief, but they elect a headman for each village to manage its affairs. The population of Manipur is divided into four tribes, the Khumal, the Luyang, the Ningthauja or Meithei, and the Mayarang, of which the Meithei (69,400) seems to have absorbed the others. 134 5- Ethnography. and is used as a general title by the inhabitants. The exogamous sub- divisions of the tribes, however, are still in existence, and seem to consist of the descendants of an individual, by whose trade or nickname the section is called. In 1720, the then Chief, called by the Muslim title of Gharib Navaz, was persuaded by some Brahmans at his court that he and his subjects were K.satriya of the Lunar race. The monarch thereui)on embraced their creed and was invested with the sacred thread, and with him a large number of his people. Since then, not only have most of the Meithci become K.satriya, but the rank has been conferred by the Chief upon a plentiful supply of recruits from the surrounding Kuki and Naga tribes. The result is that at the Census only 33 of the inhabitants of the State returned the tribal name, whilst the 33,000 Manipuri found on the record are bastard Bengali enumerated in Kacar and its vicinity. The Brahmans wht) first entered the State upon their mission of conversion were given wives of the class of Kei, or Naga slaves of the Chief, into which body their descendants also married, so that the sacerdotal caste docs not bear any special title to respect in the eyes of the local K.satriya, to whom many of them act as cooks, for the convert is most particular as to diet and intercourse with his inferiors. Nevertheless, they have 300 deities of the old worship who are still propitiated through the native priest, or Maiba, and in every house hangs the basket containing the household god. The connection of the ruling family with the Jadav clan has naturally attracted the Manipuri K.satriya to Mathura, the centre of Krsna-worship, where a small colony of them appears to reside. They also observe the great Kr.sna festivals in their native country. The Loi clan of the papulation seem to be descended from the Mayarang, and now to constitute a sort of receptacle for anyone degraded from the K.satriya class. The Loi are the helots and labourers of the State, and the original families of the clan have their own dialect. It seems, however, that a Loi who embraces Brahmanism and has never been degraded from any other position, may be made at once a Ksatriya. § 98. (gj The Lu§ei (63,600). This people, who call themselves Dulien, are of the same race as the Thado, or Kuki, whom they drove out some sixty or seventy years ago. Long previous to that date, however, a Chief of the Lu.sei had subjugated most of the hill villages around him, and his descendants are said to be the progenitors of the present numerous Chief- tains who rule the tract. The clans and subdivisions are many, but they seem constantly to be being absorbed or reformed, always with reference to connection with the eponymous founder. Each village is under one of these petty Chieftains, who is entirely independent but has recognised duties towards his fellow villagers, and in return receives a certain share of each man's rice crop. The only remedy against a too despotic headman is to flit, and transfer allegiance to another village. The village itself is stockaded, like those of the Naga, but is laid out differently, the streets radiating from a square in the centre, in front of the house of the Chieftain. Except in detail, the religion of the Lusci does not materially diflfer from that of the tribes just mentioned. Like most of the Kuki, the Lu.sei is a keen and expert hunter and snarer, and seems to carry into his warfare the qualities which makes him successful against wild animals, for he rarely attacks except from ambush or by a surprise. The tribe is not given to head-hunting for the mere sake of the trophy, but cuts off the head of his enemy in order to prove to the women at home that he actually killed Castes and Caste-Groups. F. Hill Tribes. 135 him. South of the Lusei Hills, the tribes almost entirely belong to Burmese races, with which this review is not concerned. § 99. (li) The San tribes (4,600). The portion of this great race which has found a home in British India is but small, and, with one exception, of comparatively recent settlement. The break-up by the Burmese of the Mau San dominion on the upper Irawadi, about 1760, obliged several small bodies of different tribes to cross the Patkai, and settle east of Sadiya, on the Brahmaputra. Amongst these are the Khamti, Turung, Nora and Phakial. The Khamti were originally connected with the Ahom, who will be mentioned later, and it was with the permission of the Ahom Chief that the former obtained a foothold in Assam. They encroached, however, got into trouble about their practice of raiding for slaves, and were finally scattered about 70 years ago, many returning across the hills to the Irawadi. A few years later another colony api>carcd and settled in the same tract, where they now are. The Phakial also belonged to the Mogaung kingdom, and had to leave when the Burmese overran their country. They did not make direct for Assam, but halted on the way. Being probably pressed by the Singpho, or Kacen, they accepted the invitation of the Ahom to settle along the Dihing, and afterwards near Jorhat, from which, however, they withdrew when the Burmese entered Assam. The Nora belong to one of the tribes of the Ahom which elected to remain on the east of the range when the main body crossed into Assam. They are also called Khamjang, from one of their halting places in the north-east. From this they were ejected about a century ago by the Singpho, and came into Assam for safety. It is said by the Turung, another tribe of the same origin, that the Nora, having settled in the valley, sent for them to join the colony, and as they were oppressed by Kacen, they came. On the way, however, they were taken prisoners and enslaved by the Singpho, and were only released on the arrival of a British expedition in 1825. They intermarried with their captors and are accordingly looked down upon by the Nora, still more by the Khamti, who stand at the head of the San community of Assam. Turung brides are taken by the others, but none are given in return. All the above tribes are Buddhist and have their own priests. The Alton, a small band of refugees from the San court of Mungkong, settled in two bodies, one near the others of their race, and the other in the Naga hills. Both, though professing Buddhism, are gradually becoming Brahmanised, alike in creed and language. The Census figures for these small communities are anything but accurate, as many are set down simply as San, and others as Buddhist, without any tribal title. Finally, there are the Ahom, the only tribe of long settlement and political importance. They have been mentioned more than once in connection with tritial religion and language, having abandoned their tradition and practice in regard to both. They have preserved, however, a very complete series of histories of their career. From these it appears that they left Mogaung on the Irawadi about 1228, in consequence of a dynastic dispute, and crossed the Patkai into the north-east corner of the province which now bears their name. By 1500 they had subjugated the Cutiya ; and forty years later, the Kacari or Bodo dominion fell to them. They recovered from a severe defeat at the hands of the Koc, and repulsed on several occasions an invasion by the Muslim, getting possession of the valley as far west as Gauhati, and later, to near Goalpara. Their decline set in on the conversion of the Chief to Brahmanism. Discontent arose 136 5- Ethnography. amongst those who would not follow his example. Some rebelled ; the seat of government was withdrawn down the valley; the Burmese were called in, and ended in absorbing the whole kingdom, until the British took possession. It seems that the Ahom were divided into classes but whether these were endogamous or not is uncertain. The highest class Comprises the Chiefs family and six or seven others of rank. The middle class is divided functionally, and the third comprises all who are bound to render services to the Chief. There were also Levitical or priestly families. In the present day the distinctions based on occupation and on service formerly rendered are dying out. The whole tribe has become to a greater or less extent Brahmanised; that is, the spiritual authority of a Gosai is acknowledged, and some changes in diet are gradually adopted. The priests, as in the case of the Cutiya, stood out for some time longer than the rest, but have now conformed. It is curious that whilst the little that remains of the sacred writings of the Ahom is in a language closely resembling that of the Khamti, the y\h6m were never Buddhists. It may be inferred from this, perhaps, that the latter had not reached the upper valley by the 13 th century. Nowadays, the Ahom are all nominally Brah- manists except about 400, and it is said to be only a matter of time for the whole tribe to be absorbed into the various castes of the valley. § 100. The Singpho (1,800). So few families of the great Kacen race are found within the borders of India, as the limits of that country are here understood, that the only reason for mentioning them is the reference made above to their interception of bodies of immigrants on their way to Assam. About a century ago a small colony of the northern Kaccn made their way into the same corner of the valley as the rest of the Irawadi races had done, and there they have remained, under their Assamese designation of Singpho, or "the Men". The main feature of interest in connection with them is that the offspring of their alien slaves, who form a separate community called Doania, now outnumber their former lords and masters. Both are Buddhist in the main, but the Doania are inclining towards Brahmanism. About 340 are returned under their tribal religion. § loi. Himalayan (Nepali) tribes (218,600). Of the tribes coming within this group only a few are settled in British territory, and the rest belong to Nepal, where no Census has been taken. Almost all of the former class are concentrated in Sikkim, Darjiling and the immediate neighbourhood, whilst the Nepali subjects are either sojourners in or about the same locality, or are serving in the Gorkha regiments in Assam. The Lepca, or, as they call themselves, the Rong, claim to be the original inhabitants of Sikkim, though one of their subdivisions is said to have come down from the Chinese frontier. The Khambu and Li mbu assert them- selves to belong to the Kirata race, a pretension which is not allowed by the Yakha, who would limit the territory associated with that ancient title to the tract between the Diid-Kosi and the Tambor river, where they live themselves, along with a tribe known there as Jimdar, or Rais. This title, however, has been appropriated by the Khambu living in the Darjiling territory, but it would not he allowed to them across the Nepal frontier. The Limbu touch the Kirata tract on the west, the Khambu on the north, and the Lepca on the east. The Limbu are amongst the earliest inhabi- tants of the country where they are still found, and from their appearance it seems that they are originally from Tibet. Their petty Chieftains were in power towards the end of the i8th century, when the Gorkha occupied i Castes and Caste-Groups. F. Hill Tribes. 137 Nepal, and incorporated the Kirata land with their new acquisition, after a stout resistance from the Limbu. The latter take rank amongst the Kirata tribes after the Khambu and before the Yakha, though, as above remarked, in Nepal the order may be different as regards the Yakha. A certain number of the Limbu have entered into close relations with the Lepca, intermarrying with them and eating their food, a course which amongst the other Kirata places them outside their fellows. At the same time, it appears that the Lepca, Miirmi and other Himalayan Mongoloids are admitted into the Limbu ranks after certain ceremonies, whilst the Khambu and Yakha may be adopted without such formalities. The Limbu have their own priests as well as using the exorcists, or Bijua, common to all the tribes of the neighbourhood. They indifferently profess S'aivism when amongst Brahmanic castes and employ the Lama at a higher altitude. Probably their real creed is that of old Tibet. Their kinsfolk and neigh- bours, the Khambu, live on the southern range of the Himalayan system, where those who own land call themselves Jimdar, .so that this title has been merged in the general tribal designation at the Census, without reference to the claims of the Yakha mentioned above. They profess Brahmanism, but employ no Brahmans, and serve an ancestral deity through Home, priests corresponding to the Bijua of the other Tibetan communities. They seem to have some faint reminiscence of Buddhism in portions of their worship, and may once have passed through a phase of that creed, like many of the Himalayan tribes. They intermarry with a beef-eating tribe of Khambu from the north of the main range, and on that account, irrespective of the quarrel about nomenclature, are kept at arm's length by the Kirata of the west. These last, as well as the lower tribes of Kirata, such as Hayu, Thami, and Danuar, of the Tarai, are only sparse and occasional residents in British India. The Lepca probably represent two different immigrations from Tibet or its eastern frontier, but the sections are now amalgamated. Amongst the clans, however, two stand above the rest, and do not intermarry with other Lepca or with Limbu, and it is possible that these are the descendants of the semi-Chinese band introduced along with one of the Sikkim Chiefs from across the Tsan-pu. In the present day, the Lepca is working a little more steadily than he was accustomed to do before the British occupied Darjiling, but he still objects to remaining more than a few years in one locality, and after a season or two of careless cultivation, moves off to fresh woods, in which he can burn enough vegetation to manure his ])atch of rice or maize. Buddhism is professed by the whole tribe, and their Lamas are all from Tibet; but against the more actively malevolent spirits the aid of the Bijua or Ojha is invoked. Their religion is very much that of the Limbu, behind a veil of Buddhism of the Himalayan type. The Tibetan strain is much more marked in the Murmi than in most of the tribes hitherto mentioned; indeed, the usual name for the tribe is Tamang Bhotia, and the sub- divisions are almost all Tibetan in their titles. The Miirmi have been long in their present locality, and have half-assimilated a good deal of Brah- manism which is obscuring the Buddhism they brought with them. But though the Brahman officiates for them at the festivals of his creed, and the Lama is called in for marriages, stones, trees and village gods are not neglected, and if a Lama be not at hand, their worship is carried on by any layman who has mastered the procedure. They rank as a pure caste in Nepal, but will eat with the Kirata and Lepca. The majority of 138 5- Ethnography. those enumerated in British territory are probably labourers in the tea gar- dens of Darjiling. In their native place the Murmi are an agricultural class. The Ncvar, of whom a few thousands arc found in the same locality as the Murmi and Kirata, are not a caste, but the aggregate of the early inhabitants of Nepal, differentiated into functional divisions which gradually grew into castes. The Nevar are both Brahmanists and Buddhists, the latter are attracted to the Tibetan frontier, whilst the others are gaining ground on the south ranges and valleys. The two stand absolutely aloof from each other in all social matters. The Nevar in British territory, being away from the strict organisation imposed upon the community by the Chief of the race ruling before the Gorkha, grow very lax in the matter of intermarriage, and thus lose position if they venture back into their native land. § 102. The five principal tribes of Nepal, known as the Mukhya, are the Khas, the Gurung, the Mangar and the Sunuvar. It was the combination of these which overthrew the Nevar rule in the middle of the 1 8th century, and established that of the Gorkha. The Khas is a thoroughly Brahmanised community, with a strong admixture of Brahman blood. On the advent of the Muslim, many Brahmans had to fly for refuge to the hills, where they settled amongst the local tribes and proceeded to bring them into conformity with their own scheme of life. To help on this task the families of highest rank were dubbed Ksatriya, and the same rank was stipulated for by them for the offspring of their own order by the hill women. These two stocks furnished the now dominant class in the State, with the peculiarity that with K.satriya rank the patronymic titles are all Brahmanic, from the caste of the father. It is also on record, however, that in the 14th century, a-Rajput Chief of north Bihar dispossessed an ancient Hill Rajput dynasty, and that the Gorkha Chief who in turn dispossessed the intruder from the plains, was himself a direct descendant of one of the Udepur line, who fled to Gorakhpur after defeat by the Muslim, and set up a princiiiality of his own on the upper Gandak. Thus, whilst the Aryan strain is undoubtedly existent in the Khas, the Mongoloidic origin is no less apparent. The Gurung rank next to the Khas among the fighting, or Gorkha, tribes. In their case there is no question of mixed origin. Since, however, the Gurung has abandoned Buddhism for the creed of his rulers, there has been, as between this tribe and the four others of the Mukhya, not exactly an interchange of brides, but the condonation of the abduction of them from each other. In the tribal worship and ceremonial there remains a good deal of the Himalayan animism, imported, probably, from the interior, and a member of the Lama sub-caste, though not a professional ministrant, is often substituted for the Brahman, when there is a suspicion of sorcery or witchcraft. The Mangar and Sunuvar both hail from western Nepal, and both made their way east-ward by the same route. Their appearance and the nomenclature of their subdivisions stamp them as Mongoloid of the Tibetan type, though both are now what are called "undeveloped" Brahmanists, like the rest, and are served by Upadhya Brahmans, who suffer no degradation thereby. Both are agri- culturists and soldiers, the Mangar also doing something in the \vay of petty trade. In connection with the recruiting of so-called Gorkha soldiers, mentioned at the beginning of this paragraph, it should be noted that the term Gorkha is used outside the State of any recruit of a Nepal tribe, but it correctly appertains to the Mukhya tribes only. At the same time. i Castes and Caste-Groups. G. Muslim Race Titles. 139 the Nepal rulers have for a generation or more taken into their service recruits from the Kirata tribes, but they are brigaded into regiments by themselves. In the British army, some of the Gorkha battalions contain a good many of this class, especially in Assam. G. Muslim Race Titles. § 103. Of the total Muslim population of India nearly 58 per cent bear the titles of races foreign to the country. Those whose names imply Arab descent amount to 30,442,000. About 4,239,000 nominally belong to the tribes on the north-west frontier, and the remaining 434,000 affiliate them- selves to races introduced by the Central Asian dynasties which successively ruled from Delhi. It must not be supposed, however, that the proportion of foreign blood is that indicated 1)y the prevalence of the above titles, except in the case of the frontier races, who have naturally overflowed into Sindh and upper India. On the contrary, in some parts of the country, it is said that converts from Brahmanism are so deeply imbued with the notion of a fourfold division of society, fostered by the traditional sacer- dotal partition of the Indian world into Brahman, K.satriya, Vaisya and S'udra, that they consider themselves bound, when acce|)ting Islam, to enrol themselves as either Sekh, Saiyad, Mughal or Pathan. In eastern Bengal, accordingly, the name of Sekh is practically assumed to connote native, instead of foreign, origin. In the Panjab, again, and the region round Delhi, the long supremacy of the ^Mughal has endowed that race with a halo which is still attractive to the local convert. Nearly nine tenths of the Turk, too, belong to a subdivision of Banjara, which, as already stated above, adopted Islam en masse; and, finally, nearly all the Arabs of Sindh bear the title of Kalhora, the ruling race before the Talpur. The figures now to be reviewed, then, must be taken with the above qualifi- cations. The latter, it will have been seen, apply most extensively to the communities purporting to belong to the native land of the Prophet, which ought to be the most honourable, as they are the most numerous on the record. §104. (a) Arabian (25,441,900). The small number returning themselves as Arab, without detail, might be still further reduced were the Kalhora to be treated as an indigenous body, bringing the total down to about 75,000. The returns of Mother-tongue would justify still further diminution, but in the west of India, where the Arab is chiefly found, the community is divided into the Vilayati, or foreigners, principally from Hadramat, and the Muvallad, or native-born, the latter being the progeny of Arab or sometimes Makrani fathers by wives taken from some local Sunni caste, in whose household the current vernacular is Hindustani. The Arabs settled in India perma- nently are generally guards in the service of native Chief or kept by the principal bankers in the same capacity. The others, true to their secular connection with India, are merchants and traders, with the modern addition of horse-dealing, in connection with the ports on the Persian Gulf The two small tribes of Hans and Khagga, in the Panjab, are also said to be Arabs who came by land and settled north of Multan. They are now apparently merged in the Pathan or Jat tribes. The title of Sekh is widely spread over the country, and, except in the Panjab and Kashmir, predominates more or less over all Muslim designations. The common practice just referred to, of taking this name on conversion is justified by MO 5. Ethnography. the Hadith, or saying of the Prophet "All converts to my faith are of me and my tribe". In Lower Bengal, from which 80 per cent of the .Sckh are returned, this title covers 85 per cent of the total Muslim population^. In the Muslim -State of Haidarabad, the corresponding proportion is 70 per cent, and in Mysore, also under rulers of this creed once, it is over 60 per cent. Elsewhere it ranges from 25 to 40. It is smaller, as is to be expected, in upper India where Islam was the State religion, and in the Panjab where conversion does not affect caste or social position, and where, as in the upper Gangetic region, the larger communities often contain a Brahmanic and a Muslim branch, giving the convert the oppor- tunity of retaining his former status, with a change in his worship only, and often a very slight one even in that. In Bihar, a jirovince which stands between the ignorance of eastern Bengal and the cxclusiveness of the upper valley, it is only the converts of the higher castes, such as Rajput, Babhan or Kayasth, who are allowed to pass directly into a race-title. Those of humbler origin have to spend a time in the probationary grade, as it were, of Nau-Muslim, or raw-recruits, and their further advancement depends upon their conduct or worldly prosperity. The Sekh are much subdivided, though throughout the greater part of India the sections have little more significance than the main title. Originally, amongst the Arabs, the term denoted eldership or a position of authority only. It subsequently became the special designation of the Qurc.s, the tribe to which the Prophet belonged, and of the descendants of his own family and of his relations. Thus, the Banu 'Abbas .Sekh are derived from his uncle, 'Abbas; the Ha.simi, from his great grandfather; J'afari, from his cousin. The .Siddiqi are so called from the first Khalif. Abu Bakr, named As Siddiq, or the Truthful One. The second Khalif, Omar, was called Faruq, the Distinguisher of Right from Wrong, and from him come the Faruqi. The Ansari, or Helpers, were the inhabitants of Al Medinah, who sheltered the Prophet, and so on with several more of these sub- divisions. In some Provinces the details of Sekh have been tabulated, but for the most part the value of the return is vitiated by the prepon- derance of those who failed to have this information entered against their names. At best, except in the north, the return indicates in most cases no more than the personal preference of the householder. In the Gangetic region, so far as the information goes, the favourite section is decidedly the SiddlqT, and after it, the Qure.si. In the Panjab, too, and in Sindh the Qure.si have been separately given, but the return is only partial. The Saiyad, a title said to be derived fromSud, gain, are, strictly speaking, the descendants of 'Ali, cousin of the Prophet, who became his son-in-law, and the line is generally limited to his offspring by Fatma, not by his other wives. Thus the primary division of the Saiyad is into the claimants through Hasan and those through Hussain, the proto-martyrs of the faith, but many call themselves after other relatives of the Prophet, using the same titles as the Sekh. Others have adopted geographical names, such as Bukhari, Sabzawan, BilgramT, Barha, the two last being descended from a celebrated Saiyad of 'Iraq, whose family settled in upper India, like many others, in the train of one of the Muslim conquerors. Probably in all the tracts surrounding Delhi and the principal seats of Muslim authority there are families of Saiyad who hold their estates by inheritance from ancestors who rendered distinguished service to the Mughal power either in the field or in administration. Indeed, one family is said i p Castes and Caste-Groups. G. Muslim Race Titles. 141 to have "made four Timurides emperors, dethroned and killed two, and blinded and imprisoned three". The genealogy of most of the Saiyad of India, however, is not so well attested, and, apart from the selection of this rank by converts of high Brahmanic caste, which is a practice said to have received the approval of the great Emperor Akbar, it is reported to be not uncommon for a Muslim changing his sect from Sunni to Si'ah, to signify his belief in the rank of 'All as jjremicr Khalif, by adopting himself into the company of the Apostles. Nevertheless, far down to the south, there are Saiyad settled whose forefathers followed the fortunes of some one or other of the Muslim invaders, and who now, though in some cases reduced to take to lowly occupations for a living, generally hold to their rank and intermarry only with other Saiyad, or members of the Mughal or Pathan races, and occasionally, but as seldom as possible, with some respectable local family of the same sect. For there are, it should be noted, Sunni Saiyad as well as those of the Si'ah sect, to which, in theory, all ought to belong. In the western Panjab the Saiyad is usually a religious teacher, irrespective of race or descent, and too often is a member of "that pestilential horde of holy men, who not only prey upon the substance of the people but hold them in the most degrading bondage". "The Pathan is a bigoted Sunni, yet he maintains more Saiyad than the Baluc, once known as "the friends of 'AH". § 105. (b) Mongol (394,600). Of the two races which entered India with the Ghaznavides and later, the Turk and the Mughal, it is hard to say which is the more unduly magnified in the Census returns. The inclusion among the former of the Turkiya sub-caste of Banjara has been mentioned. Then, too, in Bihar and round Delhi, Turk is the equivalent amongst the peasantry for any official, especially if he be of the creed of Islam, and Mughal serves the same purpose in Orissa and the east Dekkan. The real Turk in the north is the traveller or merchant from Turkistan, who is a temporary sojourner in Kashmir and Peshawar. The only permanent colony is that left by Timur in Hazara at the end of the 14th century'. In the west coast, in Bombay and a few other towns, and in Haidarabad, there are probably a few families of Osmanli. The Mughal element, in the south and east is better defined, as the con- vert of those parts does not affect the title, and those who bear it are probably correctly described, being as they are, the representatives of families brought into Bengal and the south Dekkan by the semi-independent Viceroys of Delhi. In the north there is the tendency already mentioned to assume the title of Mughal on conversion or on rising in the world, which is found in the parts of the Panjab where Islam predominates but the Pathan influence is not supreme. Along the Jamna, however, there are considerable numbers of true immigrants, settled upon estates conferred upon their family by the Turk Emperors, from Babar downwards. The dis- tinction between Turk and Mughal, however, is not in such cases very clearly drawn, and subdivisions are returned which are common to both, as, for instance, Turkman, Qizilba.s, and even Caghatai, the tribe of Babar. As a rule, the Mughal and Pathan, assuming them to be of really pure descent, are not considered, away from the frontier, at all events, as equal in rank to the Saiyad and Sekh, and their position, consequently, depends a good deal upon that of the family in its neighbourhood. In the interior, too, there is a tendency to introduce endogamous subdivisions, or more correctly, perhaps, to make existing sections endogamous. There is also, 142 5- Ethnography. at the lower edge of these communities, a fringe of dependents who are either bastards of the upper classes, as among the Rajputs, or have taken the title of their employers and patrons on conversion. These do not intermarry with the Mughal or better families of the Sckh. In the west of India, in addition to the Caghatai, there is a considerable sprinkling of Persian settlers and refugees, who go by the name of Mughal. They are strict Si'ah and do not intermarry with Indian Muslim. Most of them have engaged in trade. The Caghatai, on the other hand, have become almost an integral part of the Muslim masses, apd are Sunni, with the cu.stoms, language, and religious observances of their neighbours. i? io6. (c) The Pathan and Baluc (4,287,000). If the hypothesis of the identity of the Pathan with the Paktyes of Herodotus be true, as is now generally believed, these tribes must have been from time immemorial neighbours of India, and even occupants of some part of the territory which is now included in that country. Some of them, again, were people amongst whom Brahmanism found a favourable reception, and then. Buddhism, the latter especially lingering long in these secluded valleys and on the high road to India which passes near them. The Pathan, however, accepted with equal zeal and devotion the exceedingly narrow and superstitious form of Islam now current amongst them, and anything less like the mild and tolerant character of the Indian Buddhist than the present temperament and habits of the frontier men of nowadays can hardly be imagined. At the same time, the Pathan, like all highlanders in the tribal stage, has his charm in his virile independence and his strict observance of the national code of hospitality and asylum, even towards an enemy — the great solace of his life. It cannot be denied, however, that the epithet of "faithless", universally appended to his name by those who have to deal with him, is, like most of the proverbial sayings of the country-side, very well deserved, by at all events the hillmen. Those who have settled in the plains of the Panjab, even though within easy reach of their fellow tribesmen of the highlands, are soon softened by their circumstances, and the more they prosper the less respect they show for the hard life they have left behind. In the interior of India there is no Province or State without its quota of this race, and, no doubt, looking at the extent to which soldiers of fortune were settled by their victorious employers upon the land overrun by them, there is a good deal of real Pathan blood disseminated amongst them, but not to anything like the amount indicated on the face of the returns for regions like Bengal or the peninsula. In the former, indeed, the title of Pathan is regarded as the right of a con- verted member of a Brahmanic military caste, and the further detail of selecting a tribe or clan presents no more difficulty to him than that of a Rajput clan does to an aspiring Kol. The term Pathan is now used to denote any one speaking the Pakhtun language, or Pastu, and thus includes the Afghan, a foreign race which, however, has impressed its name upon the whole country. The Afghan, whose Jewish origin is insisted on by several authorities, and regarded as unproved by others, first settled in the hill tracts of Ghor and Hazara. Thence they descended upon the Helmand valley, which was in the occu- pation of the Gandhari, a Pathan tribe expelled from the Peshawar valley by one of the Scythian invaders. These people were dominated and then converted by the Afghan, who finally intermarried freely with them. The Gandhari, however, took the first opportunity of reverting to their former i Castes and Caste-Groups. G. Muslim Race Titles. 143 seat, where, under the names of Yusufzai, Mohmand, etc., they now reside. The Afghans, by this time known as Tarin, Sirani, and Abdall, or Durrani, remained round Kandahar until the i8th century, when they transferred their headquarters to Kabul. The Ghilzai, a Turk tribe which is Pathan but not Afghan, arrived across the Bamian from Ghor, like its predecessors. After rendering great assistance to Mahmud of Ghazni on his raids into India, the Ghilzai took possession of the country between Jellalabad and Qal'at-i-Ghilzai, and have since spread east and west from that nucleus. In addition to the GandharT just mentioned, the Paktyes contained, according to ancient writers, the Aparytai, or Afridi: the Sattagydai, or Khatak, and the Dadikai, or Dadi, all of whom are ascribed to an Indian origin. Along with the Afghan, Ghilzai, the Scythic Kakar, the Waziri (said to be Parmar Rajputs\ and a few Turk accretions brought down by Sabaktagfn and his successors, these tribes constitute the Pathan of to-day. The terri- tories occupied by the ancient people of that name, however, have been much altered^ The Kakar nearly obliterated the Dadi in Sewistan; the Khatak and Afridi were dispossessed by the Turk to a great extent. But through the operation of intermarriage and the adoption by all of the Pa.stu language, the whole has been welded into one nation, with the usual fictions as to common descent to explain the fusion. The modern Pathan inhabitants of upper India were first introduced by the Lodi and Sur dynasties, and consisted chiefly of Ghilzai, who were not Afghan, nor, at that time, Pathan. They were soon followed, however, by large bands of other tribes, who were generously endowed with estates by the Ghazni Chiefs and also by Babar, whose original army grew like a snowball as he moved it across the hills to the plains of promise. The tribes most numerously represented in this distribution were the Yusufzai, the Orakzai, Lodi, Kakar and Karlanri. The tribal organisation gets weaker, as is only to be expected, as the distance from the frontier increases, and is scarcely to be found in its original form east of the Jamna, where the Rohilla community, well known in history, is probably the best-knit, as it is the most prosperous, of the larger settlements of this race. In addition to the Pathan colonies and the converts arrogating to themselves that title, there is a floating population of from 100,000 to 150,000 Powindah, or itinerant traders of Pathan nationalit\-. They belong chiefly to the Ghilzai tribes, though, owing to their nomad life, their connection with their kins- folk is of the loosest. Large caravans assemble in the autumn to the east of Ghazni, and march in armed bodies through the dangerous country of the Waziri and Kakar, to the Indus at Dera Ghazi Khan. Here they deposit their arms, leave their families encamped on the grazing grounds along the river, under the guardianship of a detachment of their fighting men, and wander off across upper India, often as far as Bihar, selling the goods and horses they have brought from Kandahar and Central Asia. When these have been disposed of, the Powindah act as pedlars on behalf of merchants in the larger towns. In the spring they re-assemble on the Indus, and wend their way back to Kandahar, dispersing from that centre by their various routes through Herat and Kabul to the north. Some few of the band engage in contract labour for the season. There are gangs, also, but not belonging to the regular Powindah, which remain longer in India, taking up work as it suits them, and usually afi'ecting tracts well known for their prosperity and the unwarlike character of their population. In these lush pastures their superior size and strength, added to their loud 144 5- Ethnography. and gruff voices provide them with a living until they are moved on by the police towards a region where those qualifications are sufficiently familiar to fail to extort respect or alimony. i; 107. Baluc. A line drawn from Dcra Ghazi Khan through the Sulaiman range due west to Quettah demarcates approximately the Pathan on the north, from the Baluc on the south; but the latter have advanced considerably to the north of this limit in the Indus valley, and have also established large colonies in upper and middle Sindh. The Baluc state- ment of their origin is to the effect that .they belong to Aleppo, and were expelled from Syria on sectarian grounds. They found their way through Baghdad and Kirman to Makran, where they lived for many generations before they occupied Khalat and the south Sulaiman hills, which they took from the Pathan, A large section of their community was expelled from BalucTstan in a tribal dispute, and settled in Sindh. Members of these exiled clans joined with their kinsfolk of the plains in rendering assistance to the Emperor llumayun, when regaining India after his expulsion. They were rewarded with grants of land along the Indus, and have now spread well up the Cinab and Satlaj valleys. The result of this movement is that there are now more Baluc in Sindh and the Panjab than were enumerated in their native country, where they are outnumbered by the Brahui. There are many Baluc tribes, but the predominant section is the Rind, from which most of the rest claim to be descended. The La.sari stands next in rank, but according to the tradition of the others, it was treated as the Ksatriya were treated by Paras'urama, and swept off the face of the country, thereafter being known only in middle Sindh, and there in a disjointed condition which has never been repaired. The Rind, too, colonised a part of upper Sindh, but are not found to any great extent elsewhere in British territory, outside British Balucistan. The tribes best represented on the frontier and along the rivers are the Marri, with their hereditary foe the Bughtr, of the hills, and the Mazari, Gurchani, Leghari, Lund, Bozdar, and of course, the Rind itself Except in upper Sindh and the Dcra Ghazi Khan district, the Baluc of British domicile do not keep up in parti bus the characteristic tribal organisation so strictly observed in their own country. As they get higher up the rivers, they tend to amal- gamate with the Jat and Pathan. In the south-west Panjab, indeed, every camel driver is called Baluc, owing to the marked addiction of the race to that occupation. In spite of this dilution of the original stock, the independence of the artificial restrictions of caste and the strongly-marked character of the Baluc and Pathan alike, different as these peoples are in other respects, have had very considerable effect upon the customs and general tone of the population in the midst of which these races have settled. This influence, according to competent observers, has been greater than that of the political supremacy of Islam in producing that laxity in religious matters which is generally attributed to the latter cause alone. It should not be forgotten, however, that the people of the west enjoyed, many centuries before a single Muslim was in existence, a unique repu- tation in the eyes of the Singers on the Sarasvati, for religious indifference and "neglect of rites", which justified their inclusion amongst the MIcccha. § io8. Brahui. Last among the more definite communities acknow- ledging Islam is that of the Brahui, inhabiting Balucistan and Upper Sindh, of whom only 48,000 were enumerated within the scope of this survey. For centuries the Brahui have been Muslim, and have inter- i Castes and Caste-Groups. G. Muslim Race Titles. 145 married with Jat and Baliic, and have even admitted adult recruits from these races into their trii^es. Nevertheless, they have preserved their distinct physical features, being shorter and more swarthy than their neigh- bours; and, though, as remarked in the Introduction, their language has been overlaid with SindhT and Baluci, they keep, for domestic use at all events, a tongue undoubtedly Dravidian in its main characteristics. In common with their neighbours, from whom they have perhaps borrowed it, they hold the tradition of Arab descent, Aleppo being their chosen seat of origin. On the other hand, they are cijually certain that they have never lived in any other country but that which they now occupy. Setting on one side the conjecture that the Brahui are of Scythian race, for which there is little corroborative evidence, it is known that there was of yore a considerable Indian population settled along the hill-country west of Sindh, with its own customs and temples. It is possible, therefore, that the Brahui may denote the high-water mark of the Dravidian extension northwards, left derelict and isolated under the protection of the desert, after the Indus had changed its course and the tide of Aryan occupation had absorbed the bulk of the darker race. In the present day the Brahuf are specially addicted to the rearing and tending of camels. They enjoy a good social position in Balucistan, but are rarely found far from their wide pastures, except for purposes connected with their occupation. With these tribes ends the list of the communities which have been selected as representative of the different elements of which the vast and complicated society of India is compounded. That the review of their leading characteristics is imperfect has been fully admitted throughout, and the certainty of error will not be denied by any one who has attacked even the outworks of a task of this nature. It needs but little experience of Indian life to bring home to the student of ethnography the vanity of thinking that the whole field can be adequately surveyed in the light of such knowledge as can possibly be acquired by a single individual. Here, indeed, if anywhere, a little knowledge is dangerous, because, as has been abundantly shown in the course of this review, Indian society differs from tract to tract to an extent which inevitably involves the lurking danger of being led astray by analogy or similarities of nomenclature, rites or customs, into the assumption that what is true of a community in one part is equally applicable to a body of perhaps the same name elsewhere. Information upon such distinctions must be obtained, as a rule, at second-hand, and fortunately, the supply thereof has greatly increased of late years both in amount and quality and has received valuable additions even since the body of this review was written. It is on such material that reliance has been mainly placed in the attempt here made, perhaps rashly, to give a word-picture of society as it exists to-day in India, not merely geographi- cally, but as a whole. In.lo-Arjan Research. 11. 5. 146 5- Ethnography. APPENDIX A Summary of Caste-Groups. A. («} 24 — 31 ) Special Groups. (§ 24—26) Brahman (§ 27) Rajput . . (§ 28 — 29) Traders Banya unspec* Agarval Agrahari S'rimali Porval Osval HumbacI Khatrl Arora Bhatia . Lohana Subarnabanik Balija KOmati Banjiga Vatluga Cetti . Khojah Meman Bohra . Labbai Mappila Jonakkan (§ 30) Writers Khatri. . . . Kayasth . . . Prabliu . . . Brahmaksatriya Karan-Mahant . Kanakkan Karnam . . . Vidhur . . . Vaidya . . . 14,893,300 10,040,800 3,163,300 557,600 92,000 227,400 75,000 382,700 60,700 585,000 732,100 60,600 572,800 154,800 534,700 656,300 173,400 95,900 320,000 155,300 112,100 177,300 426,300 925,200 100,300 138,000 2,149,300 28,800 4,200 195,000 63,000 42,800 39,200 90,000 Atit . Sadliu Jogi ■ Faqir And! . iJasari Panisavan 151,800 67,800 212,500 1,212,600 101,400 48,300 13,700 5. (§ 31) Religious Devotees. r Gosai 152,600 I Bairagi 765,200 B. (§ 32—53) The Village Com- munity. 6. (a) (§ 33 — 34) Landh olders. Military etc. " Jat 7,086,100 Gujar .... 2,103,100 Avan .... 686,000 Khokhar 117,500 Gakkhar . . . 30,000 Kathi . . . • . 27,400 Sumro .... 124,100 Sammo .... 793,800 ^ Taga .... 165,300 Babhan-Bhuinhar 1,353,300 r Rajbahsi-Koc . . 2,408,700 L Ahum .... 178.000 Khandait 720,300 Maratha . . . 5.029,300 r Razu .... 113,500 L Velama .... 519.900 - Kalian .... 494,600 Maravan 350,000 Agamudaiyan . . 318,600 Nayar .... 1,046,700 Kodagu. . . . 36,200 (b) (§ 35—36) Peasants. Kambo .... 183.600 Me6 395,000 Thakar 102,200 Rathi 39,300 Raut 81,900 Ghirath 170,100 Kanait 389,900 Appendix A. Summary of Caste-Groups. 147 (c) " Kurmi . . 3,873,600 Kucri . . 1,784,000 Lodha . . 1,663,400 Kisan . . 442,700 " Kavar . . iS6,ioo Kolta . . 127,400 _ Kirar . . 166,700 ~ Kalita . . 203,400 Halvai-Das 29,200 Kaibartta . 2,665,100 Sadgop . . 579,400 Casa . . 870,500 Gangauta . 82,600 POd\ . . 464,900 _ Namasudra 2,031,700 Kunbr . 2,700,000 Kanbi . . 1,350,600 . K6I1 . . . 2,477,300 Vakkaliga . 1,392,400 Lingayat unsp d. 2,612,300 Pancamasale 431,100 Caturtha 111,600 Banta . . 1 20,600 _ Cauda . . 162,500 " Kappu-Reddi 3,110,200 Kamma . . 974,400 Telaga . . 644,200 Kalingi . . 126,900 Tottiyan 151,000 ' VeOalan. . 2,464,900 _ Nattaman . 151,300 (§ 37) Gardeners etc. ■ Baraf 545,900 Senaikkudaiyan 39,300 . Kodikkal . . 60,000 Arain 1,026,500 . Maliar . . 159,900 ■ Mali . . . 1 ,948,600 Kachi . . . 1,260,200 Murao . . 662,900 Saini . . 200,600 Tigala . . . 64,800 (§ 38) Cattle-breeders. Ahir 9,841,900 Goala-Golla . . 1,357,400 Gaura 431,600 Rabari 253,900 Gh(")Si . . 58,500 Kannacjiyan . . 22,500 8. (i; 39) Artisans. (a) Combined castes (Panckaisi) Kammalan .... 644,600 Katfisala 295,500 Pancala . . 323,800 (b) Sonar . . 1,271,800 Niyariya . 18,700 (c) r Tarkhan . 754,500 L Barhai . 1,133,100 Sutar . . 581,100 Khati . . 219,400 (d) LOhar . . 1,605,100 Kamar . . 757,200 (e)- Raj . . . 26,000 . Thavi . . 2,300 Gaunili . 8,700 . Kadio . . 14.400 (f) Kasera . . 138,600 Thathcra . 57,800 Tambat . . 10,400 9. (§ 40) Weaver ' Patnuli . . . . . 90,500 Patve . . 72,000 . Khatri . . 56,200 i~ Tanti . . 772,300 L Tantva . . 197,900 r Perike . . 63,000 Janappan . 83,000 Kapali . . 144,700 _ DhOr, . . 24,400 r Panka . . 726,700 j Ganda . . 277,800 L Dombfi . 76,400 Kori . . . 1,204,700 Julaha . . 2,907,900 L Balahi . . 585,100 Kaikkohn . 354,700 Sale . . . 639,300 Togata . . 64,500 Devanga 288,900 Neyige unsp"*- 97,000 Jug. . . . 536,600 Ko.sti . . 277,400 148 5. Ethnography. (§ 41) Oil-presscrs. Tclf-Ghanci . . . 4,060,300 Kalu 154,900 Vaniyan Ganiga . (§ 42) Potters. Kumhar Kusavan {§ 43) Barbers Nai-Nhavi . . Hajam . . . Ambattan . . Marayan . . Mangala . . Bhandari . . 187,500 114,909 3,376,300 145,500 2,458,400 534,300 219,700 S,8oo 277,600 120,300 13. (§ 44) Washermen. DhobT-Parit . . . 2,016,900 Vannan .... 253,200 Veluttcclan . . . 24,500 Agasa 122,200 _ Cakala 470,800 14. {§ 45) Fishers, Boatmen and Porters. ' Mallah unsp''- . . 721,600 Patni 63,700 Tiyar 270,900 Malo 246,600 . Kevat 1,110,800 - Kahar 1,970,800 Dhimar 291,200 Jhfnvar 477,700 Machi 288,600 . Mohano .... 113,100 Bhof 169,800 Boya 530,400 Palle (about) . . . 150,000 Besta 230,400 Kabbera-Ambiga 76,500 Moger 38,200 ^lukkuvan .... 20,400 S'embadavan . . . 54700 (§ 46) Stone, Salt and Lime-workers. Bind 219,700 Cain 158,600 Gonrhl 165,200 17- 16. Luniya-Nuniya 807,400 Kharol . . . 12,700 Rchgar . 14,400 Kharvi . 50,000 Agria . 270,400 Uppara . 260,000 Uppiliyan 43.700 Patharvat 23,400 Baiti-Cunari . iS.ioo (§ 47) Toddy-drawers. Pasi 1,408,400 Bhandari 176,000 Paik . . 80.900 Billava . 145,600 Tivan 580,000 Tandan . 19,000 Ijavan 791,100 .S'anan . 759.300 I.liga 337,400 Gaundia 361,500 Segidi . 53,700 Yata . . 52,700 § 48—49) Field-labourers. Dhanuk .... 804,200 Arakh 76,400 Dhundia-Dhodia . . 1 10,200 Dubla-Tala via 141,800 BagdT 1,042,500 Baurl 705,600 Rajvar 166,400 Musahar .... 664,700 . Bhar 458,500 Dhakar 125,700 Palli 2,572.300 PaUan 836,500 Pulayan-Ceruman 524,500 Paraiyan .... 2,258,600 Mala 1,863,900 Holeya 866,200 Mahar 2,561.600 DhecJ 378,800 (§ 50) Leather- workers. Camar .... 11,176,700 Megh 140.500 Dagi J 54.700 Appendix A. Summary of Caste-Groups. 149 19. Madiga . . . Mang S'akkiliyan. Jloci .... Bambhi (about) (§ 51) Watchmen Barvala . Gh5tval . Kandra . Ambalakkaran Mutraca Khangar Mind . . Dosadh . i\I51 . . Berad-Bedar Ramos'i . . i§ 52—53^ Scaven Bhangi-Mihtar Cuhra . . . Mazbr (about) Bhuinmalf . . Hari and Kaora L Haddi . . . Dom .... _ Ghasiya . . . 1,281,200 579,900 487,500 1,007,800 200,000 101,700 88,800 151,500 162,500 329,100 113,700 581,900 ,258,200 145,700 646,000 60,800 839,200 1,329,400 38,000 131,600 306,500 28,100 855,600 1 19,300 54—58) Professions Subsidiary. (^ 541 Bards and Gc nealogists. Bhat . . Bhatrazu Raj-Bh5t Caran . Mirasi . 577,700 28,000 11,200 74,000 291,600 (§ 55) Astrologers etc. Jo.si . . Dakaut . Ganak Kanis'an Panan . Velan . Garpagarl 83.700 15,600 20,500 15,700 33.300 27,700 8,800 23- (§ 56— 57)Temple-services. (a) Priests. r Pujari 880 L Bhojki 1,070 r Bhojak 1,200 L Scvak 6,800 r Pandaram .... 68,600 L Valjuvan .... 85,300 r Tambala .... 3,800 L Jangam 405,000 r Garuda .... 20,600 _ Bharai 66,000 Ulama 36,200 (b) Servants. Phulari-Hugar 1 5,700 Gurao 94,000 Bari 89,600 r Satani 77,400 L Devadiga .... 23,800 24. (§ 58)Dancers andSingers. Besiya, Kancan etc. 5 7. 700 Kalavant .... 20,000 ~ DasF-Dcvali . . 25,300 L Bogam 32,900 D- (§ 59—68) Urban Castes. 25. (§ 60) Grocers etc. Attari . . Gandhabanik r Kasarvani . L Kasaundhan Gandhi . . Kunjra . . Tamboli 26. 27- (§ 61) Grain-parch Confectioners. Bharbhunja Bhathiara .... Kandu Halvai . . . . : Mayara Godiya-Guria . (§ 62t Butchers. Qasab Khatik 5,900 141,100 79,700 99,700 3,700 285,400 209,500 ers and 359,500 58,200 667,900 260,000 149,200 150,400 369,500 332,300 ISO 5- Ethnography. 28. (§ 63) Pedlars and Glass- workers. Bisati 3,600 Ramaiya .... 5.300 Manihar .... 102,300 Curihar 55, 500 Kancar 19,100 . Lakhcra . . . . 60,100 Gazula 102,000 Patra 61,400 S'ankhari .... 14,800 29. (§ 64—67) Artisans. (a) Tailors. Darji 831,100 S'impi 36,800 (b) Dyers etc. Chipi 269,400 Bhausar 38,200 Rangrej 137,000 NilarT 48,300 Galiara 1,100 (c) Cotton-scutchers. Pinjari 50,800 Behna 362,500 Dhuniya .... 272,800 Dudekula .... 74,500 (d) Distillers and Liquor- seile rs. Suriri-S'aha . . . 724,800 Kalal-Kalvar . . . 1,000,200 30. (g 68) Domestic Servants. Bihisti 107,500 Gola . . . 39,700 Kuta . . 6,400 Cakar . . 163,600 Khavas . . 30,600 S'udra . . 285,000 Sagirdpesa 47,100 Parivaram . 18,900 31- E. (§ 69—79) Nomads. (§ 69) Carriers. Banjara 496,400 I.abana 349, 500 Thori . Pcndhari 41,800 10,100 32. 33- 34- 35- 36. 37- 38. 39. (i; 70) Shepherds and Wool-workers. Gaddi 103,800 Garlariya . . Dhangar-Hatkar Kurubar Idaiyan . . . Bharvad . . 1,272,400 1,015,800 1,068,000 702,700 102,900 {§ 71) Earthworkers. Od-Vaddar . . . 903,100 Bcldar 214,700 Kura-Khaira . . . 166,500 (§ 72) Knife-grinders etc. S'ikligar .... 21,000 Ghisadi 8,400 Khumra . . . . 1,100 Takari 6,500 (§ 73) Bamboo-workers. Turi 68,000 Basor-Barisphora . 96,000 Burud-^Iedar . . . 87,600 Dharkar .... 43,500 (§ 74) Mat and Basket- makers. Kanjar 34,000 Kuravan-Koraca 234,800 Yerukala .... 65,500 Kaikadi .... 14,200 (§ 75) Mimes etc. Bahurupiya . . . 3,900 Bhand 10,600 Bhavaio .... 6,000 GundhaH .... 27,500 (§ 76) Drummers etc. Dafali . Nagarci DhOli Bajania , Turaha 50,200 20,600 43.700 14,400 77,300 (§ 77^ Juggles, Acrobats, Snake-charmers etc. Nat 162,300 Bazigar 27,000 Appendix A. Summary of Caste-Groups. 151 Dombar-Kolhati . . 39,400 " Kand 612,500 Gopal 7.100 Kondu-Dora . . . 88,700 40. (§ 78) Thieves etc. Poroja 91,900 Gadaba 41,300 Bagariya .... 30,900 Jatapu 75,700 Bediya 57,500 _ Savara 367,400 Habura 4.300 (b) (§ 87) Western Belt. Bhamtiya-UcH . . 6,100 Kurku-Korva . . . 181,800 41- (i;79)Hunters and Fowlers. Bhil . . . 1,198,800 ' Bavariya-Mogl Aheriya . . Baheliya . liy: 1 30,300 35,400 53,600 BhilSla . Dhanka . Tadvi . 144,400 66,ioo 10,500 Mahtam 82,900 Nihal 6,900 Sahariya 1 36,400 Gamta . - Patelia . 49,300 91,000 1 Vaghri . . L PardhI . . 114,000 32,000 Naikada 90,200 Nayak 25,100 Veilan . . 25,500 Chodra . !;8.200 Valaiyan . 383,000 Vettuvan . 74,900 (c) (§ 88) Sahyadri. !_ Kuriccan . 9,600 Katkari 93,000 Vfirli . . . . 152,300 F. (§ 80—102) Hill Tribes. Ghat-Thakur . . 122,300 42. (a) (§81—86) Central Belt. id) (§ 89-90) N Igiri etc. K61 299,000 ~ Kuruman . . . 10,600 Ho . . . 385,100 Irula . . . . 86,100 Munda . 466,700 Toda . . 800 Bhumij . . 370,200 _ KOta ■ 1,300 Bhuinya 789,100 r Kanikkan . • 4,100 Kharvar 1 39,600 L Malaiyan . . 11,200 Baiga 33,900 r Yanadi . . . 103,900 Ceru 30,200 L Cencu . . . 8,300 Kharia 120,700 Santal 1,907,900 43- t§ 91 — 100) Assam Tribes. . Mahili 66,800 (a) Bodo-Kacari . . . 242,900 Garo 162,200 r Birjia 5,700 L Juang 11,200 Lalung 35,500 Uraon 614,500 Rabha 67,300 Male 48,300 Mec 99,500 . Mal-Paharia 35,000 Hajong 8,800 " GOnd . . 2,286,900 : Tipparah-Mrung 111,300 Majhvar 52,400 L Cutiya 85,800 Bottada-Bhatr a 50,100 Halaba . . 90,100 (bl Miri 46.700 Pathari . . 2,900 Abor 320 Pradhan 22,900 Daphla 950 - KOyi . 115,200 Aka . . 28 152 5- Ethndc.raphy. (c) Khasi ui,6oo 44. (§ loi — 102) Himalayan Ne- Sainteng 47,900 pali) Tribes. (d) Mikir . . 87,300 " Khambu .... 46,500 Yakha . 2,400 (e) Naga unsp"'- 78,900 _ I.imbu 24,600 Angami-Teng ma 27,500 I-epca 18,000 Ao . . . 26,800 Murmi 33,900 Sema-Sima 4,700 Nevar 11,500 Lhota . . 19,300 , "" Khas 15,900 Rengma 5,600 Guriing 16.600 (f) Kuki unsp""- 67,200 Mangar 23,900 Meithci . . 69,400 Sunuvar 6,900 Lu.sci . . 63,600 ,. Gorkha unsp^"- 18,400 (g) San unsp''- 1,850 G. (§ 103—108) Muslim Race Titles. Khamti . . 2,000 45. (a) r Arab unsp''- . . 96,700 Phakial . . 220 ; Sekh . . 23,836,800 Nora . . 140 [ Saiyad . 1,508,400 Turung . . 400 (c) r Turk 5.700 Aiton 80 L Mughal 388,900 [Ahom* 178,000] (d) r Pathan 3,204,500 (h) Singpho 800 Baluc 1,034,300 Doania . . 1,000 \_ Brahuf . . 48,200 Included amongsl Landed-Military in 6 (a). Total of selected Castes and Tribes 265,701,200. Appendix B. Caste Index. 153 APPENDIX B. Caste Index. Caste Group 1 . 0 c a 11 1 y Abor 43(b). Hill tribe Assam Himalaya Agamudaiyan 6(a). Landed-dominant Tamil Agarval 3. Traders North and West Agasa 13. Washermen Karnatic Agrahari 3. Traders Agra Agria 15. Saltworkers Agra and West Coast Aheriya 41. Hunters and towler.s Panjab and Agra Ahfr 7. Cattle-breeders Upper and Central India Ahom 6(a). Landed-dominant Assam Alton 43(g). Hill tribe E. Assam Aka 43(b). Hill tribe Assam Himalaya Ambalakkaran 19. Watchmen Tamil Ambattan 12. Barbers Tamil Ambiga = Kabbera Andi 5. Religious mendicants Tamil AngamT-Tengima 43(c). Hill tribe E. Assam Ao 43(e). Hill tribe E. Assam Arab 45(a). Muslim race Panjab and West Arain 6(c). Market-gardeners Panjab Arakh 17. Field-labourers Agra etc. Arura 3. Traders W. Panjab Atit 5. Devotees Bengal and North Attari 25. Perfume-makers North and Centre Avan 6(a). Landed-dominant Panjab Babhan-Bhuinhar 6(a). Landed-dominant Ganges Valley, Bihar Bagariya 40. Thieves Cent. India Bagdi 17(a). Field-labourers Bengal Baheliya 41. Fowlers Panjab Bahuriipiya 37. Mimes Panjab and Ui)per India Baiga 42(a). Hill tribe Cent. Prov. Bairagi 5. Devotees Univers. N. and Centre Baiti 15. Lime-burners Bengal Bajania 38. Drummers etc. West Balahi 9. Weavers Rajputdna etc. Balija 3. Traders Telingana Baluc 45(c). Muslim race Panjab and Sindh Bambhi i8. Shoemakers Rajputana Banjara 31. Carriers North and Centre «54 5. Ethnography. Taste (>r'iu\i I . (J c a 1 i t y 15anjiya 3. Traders Karnatic Bahsphura-Basor 35. Bamboo-workers 1 Upper and West. India Banta 6(b). Peasants j Kanara Banya unsp<*- 3. Traders Univ. except in South Barai 6(c). Bctel-vine-growcrs Univ. except in South Barhai 8(c). Carpenters Upper India Bari 23(b). Leaf-plate-makers Upper India Barvala 19. Watchmen Panjab Bas6r = Baiisphora Bauri 6(c). Field-labourers Bengal Bavariya 41. Fowlers etc. Panjab and Agra Bazigar 39. Acrobats etc. Panjab Bcdar = Bcrad Bediya 40. Disreputable nomads Upper India Bchna 29(a). Cotton-scutchers Upper India Beldar 33. Earth- workers North and Centre Berad-Bedar ig. Watchmen Karnatic Bi'siya-Kancan 24. Dancers and singers Upper India Besta 14. Fishermen Telingana Bhand 37. Mimes Panjab etc. Bhandari 12. Barbers Orissa Bhandari 16. Toddy-drawers West Coast Bhangi-Mihtar 20. Scavengers All but in South Bhar i7(ai. Field-labourers Bchar etc. Bharai 23(a). Shrine priests Panjab Bharbhunja 26. Grain-parchers Upper India Bharvad 32. Shepherds West Bhat 21. Bards and genealogists Upper and West. India Bhathiara 26. Public cooks W. Panjab Bhatia 3. Traders West Bhatra = Bottada Bhatrazu 21. Bards and genealogists Telingana Bhausar 29(b). Calenderers West Bhavaio 37. Actors West Bhil 42(b). Hill tribe West Belt Bhilala 42(b). Hill tribe West Belt BhOi 14. Fishers and porters Dekkan and West Bh6jak 23. Priests to Jains Rajputana BhOjki 23. Priests of hillmen Panjab Bhiiinhar = Babhan Bhiiinmali 20. Scavengers Bengal and Assam Bhuinya 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal and Cent. Belt Bhumij 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Bihisti 30. Water bearers North and Centre Billava 16. Toddy-drawers Kanara i Appendlx B. Caste Index. '55 Caste Group Locality Bind 15. Stone and lime-workers Bihar and Oudh Birjia 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Bisati 28. Pedlars Panjab etc. Bodo = Kacari Bogam 24. Dancers Telingana Buhra-Vohora 3. Traders and cultivators West Bottada-Bhatra 42(a). Hill tribe South Cent. Belt Buya 14. Fishers etc. Telingana Brahmaksatriya 4. Writers Gujarat Brahiij 45. Muslim race Sindh Frontier etc. Ruriitl-Mcdar 35. Bamboo-workers Dekkan and Karnatic ("ain 15. Stone-workers Oudh and Bihar Cakala 13. Washermen Telingana Cakar 30. Domestic servants Rajputana Camar-Khalpo 18. Leather-workers Univ. except in South Caran 21. Genealogists West Casa 6(b). Peasants Orissa Caturtha 6 (b). Cultivators and traders Karnatic Cencu 42(d). Hill tribe Eastern Ghats Ceru 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Ceruman = Pulayan Cetti 3. Traders Tamil Chipi 29(b). Calenderers and dyers Upper India Chodra 42(b). Hill tribe West Cuhra 20. Scavengers Panjab ("unari-Baiti 15. Lime-burners Upper India and Bengal Ciirihar 28. Pedlars and glass-workers North and Centre Ciitiya 43(a). Hill tribe Assam Dafali 38. Mendicant drummers Agra and Bihar Dagi 18. Leather-workers Panjab Hills Ddkaut 22. Astrologers Agra etc. Uaphla 43(b). Hill tribe Assam Himalaya Darji 29(a). Tailors Universal Dasari 5. Devotees Telingana Dasi-Devali 24. Dancers Telingana and Karnatic Dcvadiga 23 (b). Temple servants Telingana and Karnatic Devali ^ DasI Devahga 9. Weavers Karnatic Dhakar 17. Field-labourers Rajputana etc. Dhangar-Hatkar 32. Shepherds Dekkan Dhanka 42(b). Hill tribe West Belt Dhanuk 17. Field-labourers Agra and Rajputana Dharkar 35. Bamboo-workers Agra and Rajputana 1 56 5. Ethnography. Caste I,(.kalit\ bhcM.I Dhimar Dhobf-Parit Dhoriia = Dhunc.lia Dholi Dhor Dhuldhoya = Niya- riya Dhundia-Dhodia Dhuniya Doania Pom-Dumna Dombar-Kolhati Domba Dosadh Dubla-Talavia Dudekula pum = Mirasi Dumna = Dom Faqir Gadaba Gadariya Gaddf Gakkhar Galiara GamaHa = Gaundla Gamta Ganak Ganda Gandhabanik Gandhi Gangauta Ganiga Garo Garpagari Garuda Cauda Gaundi Gaundla-Gamajla Gaura Gazula Ghanci = Teli Ghasiya 17. Village menials 14. Fishers etc. 13. Washermen 38. Drummers 9. Hemp-weavers etc. 17. Field-labourers 29(c). Cotton-scutchers 43(h). Bastard Singpho 20. Scavengers 39. Acrobats etc. 9. Weavers 19. Watchmen 17. Field-labourers 29(c). Cotton-scutchers 5. Religious mendicants 42(a). Hill tribe 32. Shepherds 32. Shepherds 6(a). Landed-dominant 29(b). Indigo-dyers 42(b). Hill tribe 22. Astrologers 9. Weavers 25. Grocers 25. Grocers 6(bi. Peasants 10. Oil-pressers 43(a). Hill tribe 22. Hail-averters 23 (i). Low priests 6(b). Peasants 8(e). Masons 16. Toddy-drawers 7. Cattle-breeders 28. Pedlars 20. Scavengers West Ujjper and Cent. India Univ. cxce|)t in South West Dekkan West North Assam Upper India E)ekkan N. E. Madras Bihar West Telingana Universal N. E. Madras Upper India Panjab Hills Panjab West West Assam East Cent. Prov. Bengal Dekkan etc. Bihar Ivarnatic Assam Cent. Prov. West Karnatic Dekkan Telingana Bengal Telingana Ganges Valley i I Appendix B. Caste Index. 157 Caste Group Locality (Ihat-Thakiir 42(c). Hill tribe Sahyadri (Ihatval 19. Watchmen Bengal Ghirath 6(b). Peasants Panjab Hills Ghisadi 34. Knife-grinders Dekkan (.hosi 7. Cowherds Upper India Goala-Golla 7. Cattle-breeders Upper India Gudiya-Guria 26. Confectioners Bengal-Orissa G61a 30. Rice-pounders West and North Golla = Goala Gonc.l 42(a). Hill tribe Cent. Prov. Gondhali 37. Ballad-singers Dekkan Gurirhi 15. Stone-cutters Bihar and Oudh Gopal 39. Jugglers Dekkan Gorkha unsp''- 44. Himalayan tribe Nepal Gosai 5. Devotees Univ. except in South Giijar 6(a). Landed-dominant Panjab and Agra Gurao 23(b). Temple-servants Dekkan Giiria = Gocjiya Giiriing 44. Himalayan tribe Nepal Habura 40. Thieves Upper India Haddi 20. Scavengers Orissa Hajam 12. Muslim barbers Universal Hajong 43(a). Hill tribe Assam Halaba 42(a). Hill tribe S. E. Cent. Prov. Halvai 26. Confectioners Upper and East. India Halvai-Das 6(b). Peasants Assam Hari-Kaora 20. Scavengers Bengal lliukar = Dhangar HO 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Holeya 17. Village menials Karnatic Hugar = Phulari Hiimbai.l 3. Traders West Idaiyan 32. Shepherds Tamil Tdiga 16. Toddy-drawers Telingana llavan 16. Toddy-drawers Malabar Iriila 42(a). Hill tribe Nilgiri etc. Janappan 9. Hemp-weavers Tamil Jahgam 23(a). Liiigayat priests Karnatic [putana Jat 6(a). Landed-dominant Panjab, Agra and Raj- Jatapu 42(a). Hill tribe N. E. Madras Jhinvar 14. Fishers and water-bearers Panjab J'"'gi 5. Devotees Upper India 1 58 J. Ethnography. ( asti- Jonakkan ( I r o u 1 > 3. Traders I.iM alit\ Malabar Josf 22. Astrologers Univ. except in South Juang 42(a). Hill tribe Orissa Hills J"g' 9. Weavers Bengal Julaha 9. Weavers U|)i)cr India Kabbcra-Ambiga 14. Fishers Telingana and Kanara Kacari-Bodo 43(a). Hill tribe Assam Kacf 6(c). Market-gardeners I'jiper and Central Karliu 8(e). Masons West Kahar 14. Fishers and porters Upper India Kaibartta 6(b). Peasants Bengal Kaikacli 36. Mat-makers Dekkan Kaikkujan 9. Weavers Tamil Kalal-Kalvar 29. (d) Distillers Upper and Cent. India Kalavant 24. Dancers West Kalirigi 6(b). Peasants Telingana Kalita 6(b). Peasants Assam Kalian 6(a). Landed-dominant Tamil Kalu 10. Oil-pressers Bengal Kalvar = Kalal Kamar 8(a). Blacksmiths Bengal Kambo 6(b). Peasants Panjab Kamma 6(b). Peasants Telingana Kammalan 8(a). Artisans Tamil Karhsala 8(a). Artisans Telingana Kanait 6(b). Peasants Panjab Hills Kanakkan 4. Writers Tamil Kanbi 6(b). Peasants West Kancan = Bcsiya Kancar 28. Glass-workers Upper and Cent. India Kand 42(a). Hill tribe N. E. Madras Kandra 19. Watchmen Orissa Kandu 26. Confectioners Univ. except in South Kanikkar 42(a). Hill tribe Malabar Kanisan 22. Astrologers Malabar Kanjar 36. Mat-makers Upper India Kannadiyan 7. Cattle-breeders Tamil Kaora = Hari Kapali 9- Jute-weavers Bengal Kapu-Reddi 6(b). Peasants Telingana Karan-Mahant 4. Writers Orissa Karnam 4. Writers Telingana Kasar-Kascra 8(f). Brassmiths Univ. except in South KasarvanI 25. Grocers Agra and Oudh Appendix B. Caste Index. 159 Caste Ci r 0 u 1 1 Local it \ Kasaundhan 25. Grocers Agra and Oudh Kasera = Kasar Kathi 6(a). Landed-dominant West Katkari-Kathodi 42(c). Hill tribe Sahyadri Kavar 6(b). Peasants Cent. Prov. Kayasth 4. Writers Upper Ind. and Bengal Kevat 14. Fishers etc. Upjier India Khaira = Kora Khalpo = = Camar Khambu 44. Himalayan tribe N6pal Khamti 43(g). Hill tribe E. Assam Khandait 6(a). Landed-dominant Orissa Khangar 19. Watchmen Cent. Ind. Kharia 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Kharol 15. Salt-workers Rajputana Kharvar 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Kharvi 15- Salt-workers West Khas 44. Himalayan tribe Nepal Khasf 43(C). Hill tribe Assam Khati 8(c). Carpenters Upper India Khatik 27. Butchers Upper and West. India Khatri 3. Traders Panjab Khatri 4. Writers Ganges Valley Khatri 9. Silk-weavers West Khavas 30. Domestic servants West Khojah 3. Traders West Khukar 6(a). Landed-dominant Panjab Khumra 34. Grindstone-makers I'pper India Kirar 6(b). Peasants Cent. Prov. Kisan 6(b). Peasants Agra and Cent. India Koc = Rajbansi Kodagu 6(a). Landed-dominant Coorg Kodikkal 6(c). Bitel-vine-growers Tamil Koeri 6(b). Peasants Agra, Oudh and Bihar K6I 42(a). Hill tribe Cent. Prov. Kolhati = Dombar KoH 6(b). Peasants West Kolta 6(b). Peasants Cent. Prov. Komati 3. Traders Telingana Kondu-Dora 42(31 Hill tribe N. E. Madras Koraca = Kuravan Kora-Khaira 33. Earth-workers Bengal Korf 1 9. Weavers Upper India Korku-Korva 42(b). Hill tribe Berar and Cent. Prov. Korvf = Kuravan i6o 5. Ethnography. 1 ( asic r,roii|i Locality Kn^ti 9, Weavers Uekkan and Cent. Prov. K()ta 42(d). Hill tribe Nilgiri K<-)yi 42(a). Hill tribe Cent. Prov. etc. Ksatriya = Rajput Kuki unsp''- 43(f). Hill tribes Assam Frontier Kumhar II. Potters Univ. except in South Kunbi 6(b). Peasants Dekkan and West Kunjra 25. Greengrocers Upper India Kuravan-Koraca 36. Mat-makers Telingana and Dekkan Kuriccan 41. Fowlers Malabar Kurmi 6(b). Peasants Upper India Kurubar-Kurumban 32. Shepherds South Kurukh = Oraon Kuruman 42(d). Hill tribe Nilgiri Kus'avan II. Potters Tamil Kilta 30. Rice-pounders Upper India Labana 31. Carriers Univ. except in East Labbai 3. Traders S. E. Coast Lakhera 28. Lac-workers Upper India Lalung 43(a). Hill tribe Assam Lepca-Rong 44. Himalayan tribe Sikkim Lhota 43(ei. Hill tribe. E. Assam Limbu 44. Himalayan tribe Nepal Lihgayat unsp''- 6(b). Peasants Karnatic Lodha 6(b). Peasants Upper India Lohana 3. Traders Sindh Lobar 8(d). Blacksmiths Univ. except in South Luniya-Nuniya 15. Salt-workers Upper India Lusei 43(0- Hill tribe E. Assam Machi 14. Fishermen Panjab and West iVladiga 18. Leather-workers Telingana Mahant = Karan Mahar 17. Field-labourers Dekkan McihilT 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal iMahtam 41. Fowlers etc. Panjab Majhvar 42(a). Hill tribe S. Ganges Valley IMal 19. Watchmen Bengal Mala 17. Field-labourers Telingana Malaiyan 42(d). Hill tribes Nilgiri and Malabar Male 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Mair 6(c). Market-gardeners Univ. except in South Maliar 6(c). Market-gardeners Panjab Mallah unspJ- 14. Fishers and boatmen Bengal Appendix B. Caste Index. i6i Caste Group Malo Mal-Paharia Mang Mahgala Mangar Manihar Mappila Maratha Maravan Marayan Mayara Mazbi Mcc j\lC-dar = Buruil Mcgh Meithci INIcman MC-0 Mihtar = Bhangi Mikir Mimar = Raj Mma Wirasi-Dum Miri Moci Moger Wohano Mrung = Tipparah IMughal Mukkuvan Munda Murao Murmi Musahar Mutraca Naga unsp'i- Nagarci Nai-Nhavl Naikada Namas'udra Nat Nattaman Nayak Nayar Indo-Aryan Research. II. I 14. Fishers and boatmen 42 (a). Hill tribe 18. Leather-workers 12. Barbers 44. Himalayan tribe 28. Bead-pedlars 3. Traders 6(a). Landed-dominant 6(a). Landed-dominant 12. Barbers etc. 26. Confectioners 20. Scavengers 43(a). Hill tribe 18. Leather-workers 43(f). Hill tribe 3. Traders 6(b). Peasants 43(d). Hill tribe 19. Watchmen 21. Genealogists 43(b). Hill tribe 18. Leather-workers 14. Fishermen 14. Fishermen 45. Muslim race 14. Fishermen 42(a). Hill tribe 6(ci. Market-gardeners 44. Himalayan tribe 17. Field-labourers 19. Watchmen 43 (cl Hill tribes 38. Drummers 12. Barbers 42(b). Hill tribe 6(b). Peasants 39. Acrobats 6(b). Peasants 42(b). Hill tribe 6(a). Landed-dominant Locality Bengal Bengal Dekkan Telingana Nepal Upper India Malabar Dekkan etc. Tamil Malabar Bengal Panjab Assam Panjab Hills Manipur West Rajputana and Panjab Assam Rajputana Panjab Assam Univ. except in South Kanara Sindh Upper and West. India Malabar Bengal etc. Upper India Nepal Upper India and Bihar Telingana Assam Upper India Univ. except in South West Bengal Upper India Tamil West Malabar l62 5. Ethnoorachy. Caste fir(iU|i Locality Nevar 44. Himalayan tribe Nipal Neyige unsp"*- 9. Weavers Karnatic Nhavl = Nai Nihal 42(b). Hill tribe. West Nllari 29(b). Indigo-dyers . Upper India Niyariya-Dhuldhoya 8(b). Gold-dust-washers Upper and West. India Nora 43 (g). Hill tribe E. Assam Nuniya = Luniya Od-Vatldar 33. Earth-workers Univ. except in East Oraon-Kurukh 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Osval 3. Traders West Paik 16. Toddy-drawers Kanara PaUan 17. Field-labourers Tamil Palle 14. Fishermen Telingana PaUi 17. Field-labourers Tamil Panan 22. Exorcists Malabar Paficala 8 (a). Artisans Karnatic Paficamasale 6(b). Peasants Karnatic Pandaram 23 (a~l. Priests Tamil Panisavan 5. Devotees Tamil Panka-Pan 9. Weavers Cent. Prov. Paraiyan 17. Village servants Tamil PardhT 41. Fowlers etc. Dekkan Pant = DhobI Parivaram 30. Domestic servants Tamil Pasi 16. Toddy-drawers Upper India and Bihar Patella 42(b). Hill tribe West Belt Pathan 45. Muslim race N. W. Frontier Pathari 42(a). Hill-tribal-priests Cent. Prov. etc. Patharvat 15. Stone-w^orkers Dekkan Patnl 14. Fishers etc. Bengal Patra-Pator 28. Pedlars Orissa PattunOrkaran 9. Silk-weavers Tamil Patve 9. Silk-weavers Upper and Central India Pendhari 31. Carriers Dekkan and Karnatic Perike 9. Hemp-weavers Tamil Phakial 43(g). Hill tribe E. Assam Phulari-Hugar 23(b). Temple servants Dekkan etc. Pinjari 29(c). Cotton-scutchers West Pod 6(b). Peasants Bengal Poroja 42(a). Hill tribe N. E. Madras Porval 3. Traders Rajputana etc. Prabhu 4. Writers West Appendix B. Caste Index. I6J Caste Group Locality Pradhan 42(a). Hill tribe 1 Cent. Prov. Pujarl 23 (a). Hill-tribal-priests Panjab Hills Pulayan-Ccruman 17. Field-labourers Malabar Qasab 27. Butchers Upper India Quresi = Sckh Rabarl 7. Camel-breeders Rajputana etc. Rabhfi 43iat- Hill tribe Assam Raj-Mimar 8(c). Masons etc. Upper India Rajbaiisl-Koc 6(a). Landed-dominant Assam and Bengal Raj-Bhat 21. Bards and genealogists Bengal Rajput-Ksatriya 2. Landed-dominant Upi)er and West. India Rajvar 17. Field-labourers Bengal Ramaiya 28. Pedlars Panjab RamOs'i" 19. Watchmen Dekkan Rangrej 29 (b\ Dyers Univ. except in South Rathi 6(bi. Peasants Panjab Hills Raut 6(b). Peasants Panjab Hills Razu 6(a). Landed-dominant Telingana Redc.li = Kapu Rehgar 15. Salt-workers Rajputana Rengma 43 (ei. Hill tribe E. Assam Rong = Lepca Sadgop 6(bV Peasants Bengal Sadhu unsp*^- 5. Devotees West Sagirdpesa 30. Domestic servants Orissa S'aha = Suhri Sahariya 41. Fowlers etc. Cent. India Saint 6(c). Market-gardeners Panjab Sainteng 43(c). Hill tribe Assam Saiyad 45. Muslim race Universal S'akkiliyan 18. Leather-workers Tamil Sale 9. Weavers Dekkan and South Sammo 6(a). Landed-dominant Sindh Samru 6(a). Landed-dominant Sindh San 43(g)- Hitl race E. Assam S'anan 16. Toddy-drawers Tamil S'aiikhari 28. Armlet-makers Bengal Sahsiya 40. Thieves Panjab Santal 42(a). Hill tribe Bengal Satani 23(b). Temple servants Telingana Savara 42(a). Hill tribe S. Orissa Segidi 16. Toddy-drawers Orissa 1 64 S. Ethnography. Caste ( I r . I u 1 1 Locality Sckh-QurC-.-ji 45. Muslim race Bengal Sema-Sima 43(e). Hill tribe E. Assam S'embadavan 14. Fishermen Tamil Scnaikku(laiyan 61c). Bitel-vine-growers Tamil Sevak 23. Priests to Jains . Rajputana S'ikligar 34. Knife-grinders Upper and West. India Sima = Sema S'impT 29(a). Tailors Dekkan Singpho 43(h). Hill tribe Assam Sonar 8(b). Goldsmiths Univ. except in South S'rimair 3. Traders West Subarnabanik 3. Traders Bengal S'udra 30. Domestic servants Bengal Sumro 6(a). Landed-dominant Sindh Sunrl-S'aha 29(d). Distillers Bengal Sunuvar 44. Himalayan tribe Nepal Sutar 8(c). Carpenters Univ. except in South Tadvi 42(b). Hill tribe West Taga 6(a). Landed-dominant Agra Takari-Takankar 34. Grindstone-makers Dekkan Talavia = Dubia Tambala 23(a). Priests Telingana Tambat S(f). Coppersmiths West Tamboli 25. Bitel-sellers Univ. except in South Tandan 16. Toddy-drawers Malabar Tanti 9. Weavers Bengal Tantva 9. Weavers Bihar Tarkhan 8(c). Carpenters Panjab Telaga 6(b). Peasants Telingana Tclf-Ghancr 10. Oil-pressers Univ. except in South Tengima = Angami Thakar 6(b). Peasants Panjab Hills Thathera 8(f). Brass-workers Upper India Thavi 8(c). I^Lisons Panjab Hills ThorT 31. Carriers Panjab Hills Tigaja 6(c). Market-gardeners S. Dekkan Tipparah-Mrung 43(a). Hill tribe E. Bengal Tiyan 16. Toddy-drawers etc. Malabar Tiyar 14. Fisher and boatmen Bengal Toda 42(d). Hill tribe Nilgiri Togata 9. Weavers Karnatic Tottiyan 6(b). Peasants Karnatic Turaha 38. Drummers etc. Bengal Turl 35. Bamboo-workers Bengal Appendix B. Caste Index. 165 Caste Ci r 0 u p Locality Turk unsp''- 45. Muslim race Panjab West Turung 43(g). Hill tribe E. Assam Ulama 23(a). Priests Panjab Uppara 15- Salt-workers Karnatic Uppiliyan 15. Salt-workers Malabar Vaddar = Oil Vaduga 3. Traders Telingana Vaghri 41- Fowlers West Vaidya 4. Writers Bengal Vakkaliga 6(a). Peasants Karnatic Valaiyan 41. Hunters Tamil Valjuvan 23(a). Low priests Tamil Vaniyan 10. Oil-pressers Tamil Vannan 13. Washermen Tamil Varlf 421CI. Hill tribe Sahyadri Vedan 41. Hunters Tamil Velama 6iai. Landed-dominant Telingana Velan 22. Exorcists Malabar Veimian 6(b). Peasants Tamil Veluttedan 13. Washermen Malabar Vettuvan 41. Hunters Tamil Vidhur 4. Writers Dekkan and Cent. Prov. Vohora = Bohra Yakha 44. Himalayan tribe Nepal Yanadi 42(d). Hill tribe Telingana Yata 16. Toddy-drawers Orissa Yerukala 36. Mat-makers Telingana 5. Ethnography. APPEND Showing (A) the number returning each principal '. of the populatio Language and Family India No. per 10,000 of popu- language I ,atio„ Total number returning the N. West II. I. Kol-Khervari Kol Santali Savara Kharia Korku . Gadaba Kora . 0//iers . Dravidian Gurx.l . Oraon . Kand . Maltc) . Telugu Kanarese Kodagu Tulu . Tamil . Malayalam Brahiii 0//urs III. Gipsy tongues IV. Indo-Aryan Sina etc I Kasmiri I Lahnda [ Sindhi . [ West Pahari I Central Pahari I East Pahari [ West Hindi I Panjabi . I Rajasthani 1 Gujarati . East Hindi >) Including N>ii 3,179,300 948,700 1,790,500 157,100 102,000 87,700 37.200 23,900 32,200 56,315.700 1,125,500 592,300 494,100 60,800 20,600,000 10,364,700 39,200 535.200 16,425,000 6,028,900 47,900 2,100 344,100 219,352,100 54,200 1,007,900 3,337,900 3,002,800 1,710,000 1,270,900 138,300 40,568,900 17,033,300 10,917,100 9,921,700 22,136,400 112 33 63 6 4 3 I 40 21 17 728 366 I 19 581 213 2 1 12 7.756 2 36 118 106 60 45 5 1.434 602 386 351 783 -') - I 0 1 l 0 I 0 0 0 — 9 4 9.380 9494 193 0 3.550 3 0 1,244 0 10 552 579 — 0 3 4 6 1.559 4.624 5,833 452 245 0 0 — — Stales ecicd with the Pr I Including the N. \V, Frontier Provi Table of Languages. 3LE I. ^age, and (B) the Linguistic distribution per 10,000 eh Province or State. B . 1 entral Central East West South a c >^ a 0 '■5 >< ■(3 E u >> It ■a Xi at a. 3 0 c E bo as u Xi 0 u V > u 2 (X, (U < CC E 0 OQ 10 — 0 72 354 121 103 46 0 io — — 16 112 61 — — — — ^ — 220 49 — — — 37 0 ;- — — 6 10 3 — — — — — — !— — — 50 — — 103 — — — — — J— — — 0 — — — — — — 9 — i- — — — 3 0 — — — — — — - — — 0 9 8 — — — — — — ,0 0 27 934 86 51 437 1,448 2 6,122 9.191 9,260 }- 0 25 751 — 3 302 1 — 68 12 — ;- — — 41 69 17 — — — — — — p — — 45 7 8 19 — — — — 88 — P 0 I 89 8 129 49 2 4,621 3,381 1,507 ,D — 0 3 0 0 4 1,354 0 1,402 372 7.301 l~ — — — — — — — — — 0 0 \- — — — — 0 — 0 — 0 118 37 D 0 I 5 0 4 2 4 0 31 3.805 409 - — — — 0 — 0 0 — 0 1,415 6 I _ _ . 0 0 3 2 10 21 0 0 250 13 I 109 8 69 »89 9.996 9.956 8,962 9,494 7,688 9.295 8,510 9,554 3.747 743 645 3 0 _ 0 0 — 0 0 0 0 — D 0 0 — — — — — — — — — D 40 I 0 0 0 — 90 I 0 0 0 D — — 0 — — — — — — — — II 0 — 0 — — 0 — — 0 0 — 5 0 0 — ID 32 — 0 — — 0 — 527 2,823 5,479 1,629 171 29 991 495 354 1,069 212 48 > 3 23 4 I 0 5 2 I 0 2 0 0 2 6,743 2,171 430 I 12 152 46 10 54 0 2 I 360 326 17 I 2 76 3,228 9,431 I8 23 6 .25 — 1,623 3,653 146 545 15 I 0 0 0 — lilank means that the langu ige was no returned, a cipher tl a. it was r etuniedby less than ane in io,oe xtoflbepo pulation. I68 5. ExHNOGRAPm-. India N. West Language and Family No. per 10,000 of popu- anguage ^^^^^^ Total number returning the Hihari . Bengali Assamese Oriya . Marathf 0//iers . Iranian Pasta VL Baluci Persian Of/urs Tibeto-Burman . . Bhotia Kanavari Kiranti Murmi Of/ier Himalayan . . Miri-Abor 0//u-r East-Himalayan B(-)do Garo Tipparah 0//ier Assam. . . . Mikir Naga languages . . Meithci Lu.sC'i .... VII. VIII IX. X. XI. XII XI IL Total Kuki Of/t£rs Kacin Burmese Mni . . Tai (Sam Mon (Khasi) Mongolian Malay Semitic (Arabic). . . Hamitic European Knglish Of/nrs ' '. ' i'nspicifted^\ population returning language ■) Kelurncd by Icsi than one per 10000 34,579,800 44,413,600 1,350,800 9,674,200 18,233,200 800 1,388,200 1,218,500 150,600 18,900 200 1,804,800 244,900 19,500 45.400 32,200 83,800 40,800 900 239,500 185,500 112,000 59,000 83,600 164,160 269,300 72,200 53,900 20,000 1,800 65,400 10,500 3.400 177,800 3.600 26 19,700 180 243,100 227,900 15,200 282,832,000 the Province or 11 1.223 1,570 48 342 645 O 49 43 5 I o 64 8 I 2 597 597 Table of Languages. 169 c tral Central | East I West 1 South a >-. •a 0 IS '■5 >> . V v< 2 ^ SI c 03 5 a < u a u u CQ 0 B CQ •s 2 n 03 •a u (« X K61 . 298,997 1 56) Cent. Prov. 22; C.lnd. lOO; Elsewhereo U Korku 151755 48 45 Berar 94; Cent. Prov. 13 wC « Savara 367,367 43 45 Madras 87; Cent. Prov. 5; Bengal 0 :i Kharvar •39,625 — 1 Bengal \ ; Cent. Prov. 10 ^ Kharia 120,725 92 55 Bengal 69; Cent. Prov. 47 Khaira 109,571 — 13 Bengal 6; Cent. Prov. 47 Bhinjia 84,990 — 31 Bengal 0; Cent. Prov. 33 Gond. 2,286,913 45 72 Berar92;C.Prov.77; Beng.27;Madras3 Gorirhr 264,605 68 Cent.Ind. 100; Un. Prov. 0; Bengal 0 .2 KoyI . 115,216 10 Madras 17; Haidarabad I |5 Poroja 91,886 29 Madras a Pan . 684,746 — 4 Bengal 6; Cent. Prov. and Madras I Q Oraon 614,501 96 71 Bengal 73; Assam (labourer) 8 Kand 701,198 70 68 Madras 82; Cent. Prov. 57; Bengal 38 Ot/iers 3Sb,S4b - 48 B. W^estern Belt 2,175.514 — 45 Bhil . . . 1,198,843 64 55 Cent.Ind. lOO; Baroda 100; Rajput. 97; Bombay 14; Berar 57 Bhilala . . 144,423 — 91 Cent. Ind. 100 Kotval 53,342 58 Cent. Ind. 100 _ Tadvi 10,566 80 Bombay (rest Muslim) '-2 Dhodia 110,242 — 17 Baroda 100; Bombay 3 Dubla 129,267 — 24 Baroda lOO; Bombay 3 Naikada 115,600 — lO Cent. Ind. 100; Bombay 8 Varll . 152,309 — — Bombay KatkarF 93.032 — 2 Bombay Others ib§,88i — 43 Not including Christian Converts. 172 5- Ethnography. ; Total Pcr- Percentage returning Tribal Religion Tribe popula- ning Tribal tion lan- guage Total Provincial C. Nllgiri 302,392 — 9 Irula . 86,087 2 — Kuruman 179,928 5 13 Toda . 807 99 99 Kota . 1271 — 45 Badaga 34,299 98 — D. North-East 1,419,222 — 76 Kacarf . . 242,904 1- 71 Assam 71 ; Bengal 79 Mcc . 99,534 78 Assam 100; Bengal 15 Tipparah 111,279 lOI* 4 Assam 49; Bengal 0 Garo . 166,237 112* 95 Assam 99; Bengal 82 Rabha. 67,285 30 89 Assam Lalung 25,513 46 100 Assam Naga . 162,797 — 99 Assam Mikir . 87,335 96 99 Assam Kuki . 67,212 — 86 Assam 100 ; Bengal 0 Lusei . 63,588 113* 100 Assam Miri . 46,720 87 49 Assam Cutiya 85,829 3 0 Assam KhasF . 159,549 III* 99 Assam Others. 59fi53 " 97 Assam * The Tribal language is here returned by some no longer returning the Tribe. \ Indl\, general. 173 A LIST of the more important works on Indian Ethnography by Dr. W. Siegling. India, general. The Census of India, 1901, Vols. I— XXVI. (Vol. I: India; Part I: Report by H. H. Risley and E. A. Gait; Part II: Tables; Part III: Ethnographic appendices. 3 vols. fol. Calcutta 1903). 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